King Mackerel( Scomberomorus cavalla)
Quick Facts
- Other Names: King, Kingfish, Mac, Slimey
- Size Range: The kingfish can reach a weight of over 90 pounds, but 10 to 30 pounds is more the average catch.
- Native Species?: Yes
- Food Value: The flesh of the king mackerel is grayish and it is best eaten fresh, no matter how you cook it. Often kings are smoked as a way to preserve it for later eating and this makes a great fish dip.
State Record
- Louisiana State Record: 82lbs
- State Record Date: 12/1/1980
- State Record Holder W. D. Lamb
The king mackerel or kingfish is a long slender fish with silver sides, greenishback and sharp but small teeth. They have a distinct sharp dip in the lateral line, which helps distinguish it from other mackerels, especially in the juvenile stages when the young kingfish have yellow spots similar to Spanish mackerel. They are a very popular sport fish and are also an important commercial fish. Many fishing tournaments and circuits focus on king mackerel. They are also an important charter fish. They are a schooling fish and are known for their voracious strikes on live bait, though they will also strike lures.
King mackerel are a subtropical species along the east coast of the Americas. They inhabit the Gulf in great numbers and are most prevalent in coastal waters where baitfish are most available. They will even enter deepwater ports at times.
Live bait, slow trolling is the most popular way to target kingfish. Light wire leaders, light drag and small hooks are used to present many types of live baitfish. Lures and rigged, natural baits are used with good success at higher trolling speeds. Kite fishing and drifting with live baits are also used to target kings.
King Mackerel Rules and Regulations
| Size Limit : | 24” to the fork |
| Bag and Possession Limit : | Two per person daily |
| Seasons : | Finfish |
Two day limit allowed in possession only on charter vessels and headboats on multi day trips, if the vessels have two licensed operators as required by the U.S. Coast Guard for trips more than 12 hours, and if each angler has in possession a receipt issued on behalf of the vessel verifying the length of the trip.
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Related Fishing Methods
Chunking
The use of chunks of cut bait, usually fish, to attract game fish to the boat. The hook is then placed in one of the chunks and tossed out to free-line down. Also could be considered chumming, but the size of the pieces are bigger and gives the fish something to start feeding on.
Dead Bait
Dead bait consists of many different types of bait that is no longer alive. Dead bait is still attractive to many fish as they are normally feeding by smell and dead bait is the ticket for smell. Fresh cut fish, dead shrimp, half crab, shucked clam, cut squid and all popular examples of bait that will catch a wide variety of fish. Many sport fish that are predators, will gladly take the opportunity to slurp up a fresh dead bait. A redfish is equally happy to chase down a baitfish or slurp up a dead shrimp on the bottom. Dead bait has the benefit is being easy to obtain, maintain and transport, as opposed to live bait which takes livewells, quality water control and can be harder to obtain.
Drift Fishing
Drift fishing can encompass a variety of fishing methods. Bottom fishing over structure is often done while drifting. Timing the drop of your baits as you pass by the structures below is the trick. Also knowing when you have drifted beyond the fish is a key element to being succesful. Anglers also drift while live bait fishing and chunking for bluewater pelagic fish like tuna. The use of live bait or chunks is a slower presentation where the fish are drawn to the boat by smell or vibration of live fish. Inshore you can drift along while casting for trout and redfish with baits or lures. One of the main benefits of drift fishing is that you can quietly cover ground while searching for feeding fish.
Fly Fishing
A style of fishing that utilizes a unique type of rods and reels. Long rods and simple reels allow for the presentation of “flies”, which are lures made of feather, fur, hair and synthetics. Different from conventional fishing, the weight of the line is used to carry the "lure" out whereas conventional methods use the weight of the lure to drag the line out. Flyfishing is said to be addictive and is growing in popularity.
Jigging
A versatile method of fishing for many types of fish in both freshwater and salt. A jig is a lure, normally a lead-headed lure with many various types of body/tail configurations made of rubber, hair and feather. Jigs are one of the most versatile of all lures and can be tipped with bait or not. Traditionally jigs are worked in variety of up and down motions, and can be fished throughout the entire water column, depending on the fishery. A modern form of jigs called metal jigs has taken hold and many varieties and shapes have been developed to work different ways. Made famous by the Shimano Butterfly Jig and now produced by many companies in many variations. If I could only have one lure to fish with it would be a jig.
Live Bait
Live bait is a term given to many different types of fish, crustaceans, insects and worms that are popular food items for fish and used by fishermen for bait. There are many benefits to live bait as well as a few cons. The pros normally out weigh the negatives, and live bait is widely used. The biggest benefit for fishermen is that they are using the real thing and often puts a fish's guard down. Small fish, crabs, shrimp, clams, crickets and the good ole earthworm are all used to entice a fish to the hook. The only negatives to live bait is just that, keeping it alive. Sometimes catching it can be a challenge, as only some species can be bought as live bait. No matter how you get it, live bait is a great way to target many types of fish.
Topwater
Topwater fishing refers to the working of lures that are designed to float on the surface and twitch, splash and swim like a wounded prey. The visual aspect of the bite makes this a very popular way to fish. Most predatory fish will crash a topwater plug at one time or another. Early morning, evening times are traditionally better in freshwater and inshore saltwater fisheries. Offshore for pelagics like tuna, it is more about getting in range of feeding fish and working the lure in the zone. Hang on!
Trolling
Trolling is the presentation of lure and/or baits from a moving boat. Many types of predatory fish are caught this way in both fresh and salt water. Speeds and presentations vary greatly depending on the target species. One may troll a small beetle spin for crappie with trolling motor in the lake, or charge around oil rigs at 15 knots with a high-speed wahoo spread. Trolling ballyhoo offshore is one of the most common, broad spectrum ways to catch all types of gamefish. Again there are many different methods to choose from.
Vertical Jigging
Vertical jigging popular and growing trend of using a variety of metal jigs and high speed reels to quickly drop and retrieve the jig making it dance or flutter through the water column. It is deadly on a wide variety of fish. Both bottom fish and pelagics are fooled into biting these versatile jigs.
Related Fishing Gear
Kingfish Rig
King Mackerel or kingfish have teeth and feed by chopping a bait in half on a fast strike. Anglers target kingfish with light wire leaders and double treble hook sets. One treble hook goes in the nose of the bait, while the second hook or “stinger” tucks in the back of the bait to help catch the fish as he chops it in half.
Wire Ballyhoo Rig
A ballyhoo rigged on wire leader, normally single strand, is designed to target fish species with teeth such as wahoo, king mackerel and barracuda.