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CONSERVATION
Critical Conservation Issues...
Fisheries Management & Habitat Protection
Future of Fishing in the US
WSA is working hard to encourage more anglers to catch and release. The WSA has
initiated a sign project to educate anglers why they should and how it
effects them if they do and if they don't. These signs are put up
all across Wisconsin on boat landings, fishing shops, beaches and more.
With the cooperation with the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources
and the help of Sport Fish Restoration this has increased the population
and has improved the quality of smallmouth bass fishing, but there is
still much to do.
CRITICAL CONSERVATION ISSUES FOR NORTHERN SMALLMOUTH MANAGEMENT AND FOOD FOR THOUGHT FOR THE SOUTHERN ANGLERS
In-Fisherman Magazine, Feb. 2003
- Smallmouth bass repeatedly home to the same specific nesting sites year after year, generation after generation.
- DNA testing reveals that this homing tendency is inherited and so strong that male smallmouth bass actually nest with distantly related females.
- Nesting sites are critical and need protection from shoreline disturbance.
- Nesting male bass are predetermined a year in advance of spawning.
- Northern smallmouth bass don't mature to spawn for the first time until they are between 5 and 9 years of age and between 10 and 16 inches long.
- Big bass are critical for spawning successes. They nest earlier and recuperate faster, and their offspring more likely will survive the winter starvation period.
- Force a smallmouth bass to spawn and its remaining life span becomes less than two years. Such is the cost of reproduction.
- Young-of-the-year smallmouth must grow to about the size of your little finger to survive winter.
- Targeting nesting males, even when a catch-and-release spring season allows it, affects recruitment.
- A negative relationship exists between the time it takes a male to return to its nest after being released and the rate of nest abandonment.
- When a male takes 10 minutes to return to the nest, the eggs and fry are typically preyed upon more than 90 percent of the time, and over 90 percent of such nests are abandoned.
- When males return to the nest in just two minutes, more than half the nests are still deserted.
- Kill a nesting bass and no other male will replace it that year.
- Excellent year classes are the exception not the rule, and winter determines everything. If fall freeze-up is late and spring ice-out arrives early, the winter starvation period is short and survival of yearling bass should be high.
- If cold fall weather arrives early and winter drags on for an eternity, the previous spring's hatch can be lost.
- Smallmouth bass typically establish summer home ranges and remain faithful to these areas for life.
- The size and area of a summer home range is governed by the availability of food. When food is abundant the summer home range is small. When food is scarce, the summer home range is large.
- High-grade smallmouth bass fisheries teeter on the ability of the population to maintain as many large fish as possible. Fortunately, catch and release of large bass is successful.
- In lakes and rivers, smallmouth home to specific wintering sites in fall, areas often used by huge numbers of bass. Harvesting or moving these fish to other areas can have serious negative consequences.
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FISHERIES MANAGEMENT & HABITAT PROTECTION
The Bureau of Fisheries Management and Habitat
Protection manages in-water activities and is responsible for
maintaining, enhancing, and monitoring aquatic based resources such as
aquatic ecosystems, sport and commercial fisheries, lakes and wetlands.
In addition, the bureau assesses the quality of surface water and the
biological health of rivers, lakes, and wetlands. The bureau develops
regulations and strategies to protect habitat for fish and other aquatic
life, and coordinates the state fish hatchery operations. Read more
about the work
of the bureau.
More Information > > >
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Future of Fishing in the United States
Conservation Times column
By Bruce Shupp, National Conservation Director
B.A.S.S. Times, Dec. 2002
Recently released figures from the 2001 National Survey of Fishing,
Hunting and Wildlife Associated Recreation, conducted and published by
the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, indicate that the number of
recreational anglers in the United States has continued to decline
slightly. In 1991, 35.6 million anglers, 16 years or older, fished 511
days and spent $31.2 billion. In 2001, 34.1 million anglers fished 557
million days and spent $35.6 billion. However, in 1996, 35.2 million
anglers fished 626 million days and spent $42.7 billion. These figures
show that angler numbers have been flat, on average, over the decade,
but in the middle of the decade anglers fished more often and spent more
money.
Speculation about what is going on with U.S.
sportfishing has been ongoing among anglers, resource agencies and the
sportfishing industry since fishing license sales began declining in
1990. The decade of decline occurred after continued increases in angler
numbers from the end of World War II through the 1980s.
There are many opinions and theories about why angler
numbers have not maintained pace with U.S. population growth. Normally
when people express their opinions they define one single, favorite
factor as the cause of the decline in angler numbers.
Surveys of anglers, ex-anglers and nonanglers have been
done to pin down the causes. These studies have shown there is not just
one reason for declining interest in angling. There are a multitude of
factors over the last decade that have influenced public choices for
recreational participation. The major reasons include urbanization,
declining free time within the family structure, aging of the U.S.
population and competing recreational interests.
So, while we know that the last decade has not been
sportfishing's outstanding growth period, even with the phenomenal
increase in TV fishing shows and angling publications, what can we
anticipate in the future? The American Sportfishing Association (ASA),
the organization representing the sportfishing industry, addressed the
future of fishing participation at its "Sportfishing Summit"
meeting in Tucson, Ariz., October 9-11, 2002. The featured speaker was
the eminent fishing and hunting sociologist, Dr. Robert Ditton of Texas
A&M University. Dr. Ditton has extensive experience measuring
sportsmen use, expenditures and opinions. He works very closely with the
Texas Parks and Wildlife Department and was a leader in the development
of the National Fishing and Boating Outreach Plan.
Dr. Ditton was asked by ASA to go beyond just his usual
measurement analysis and make some predictions for future angler
participation. He began by characterizing the reality of declining
angler numbers. Only 16 percent of the U.S. population 16 years and
older were fishing in 2001, down from 17 percent in 1996. The U.S.
population has increased 11 percent since 1991, while angler numbers
shrank by 4 percent. Angler numbers are declining even as the population
grows. New angler recruits have not replaced angling dropouts. But,
other sports are experiencing declines too. Baseball, softball and
volleyball participation is down, and soccer participation is flat.
Based on the current angling participation rates, public
behavior and U.S. population expansion, predictions for 2030 are a total
of 40.4 million anglers, up 5.2 million anglers, or only 13 percent
growth from 1996 to 2030. This is a numbing message for the industry!
What can be done to increase participation? Certainly,
continuation of the Recreational Boating and Fishing Foundation efforts
to increase awareness and coordinate sportfishing community marketing
and promotion. But, Dr. Ditton believes (and I share his opinion) that
marketing alone will not increase public interest in angling, and that
many of our present efforts may be misdirected.
Surveys have shown that people fish because someone
nurtured and mentored their interest. And, if you agree that this
nurturing is important, then attempts to "introduce" people to
fishing with one day derbies, rodeos, tournaments, etc., are not going
to stimulate many people to acquire an interest in this lifetime sport
unless someone, a mentor, continues this "socialization."
Family, neighbors, friends, etc. have socialized most of
us avid anglers into our sport. That socialization process usually began
at an early age (over 80 percent of today's anglers began fishing under
the age of 12) and it has continued, through differing intensities and
stages, throughout our lives.
Marketing angling to women and specific ethnic groups
requires accurate marketing information. Certainly, not all potential
anglers will relate to TV shows showing billfishing trips or bass
tournaments. And, while nonanglers may admire and envy the opportunities
described, many will not be able to visualize how their present
geographic, economic and social situation relates to Alaskan salmon
fishing or fly fishing in Argentina. These shows sell products to
existing avid anglers, but do they really stimulate nonanglers to run
out and buy a license?
Dr. Ditton's advice was to put more emphasis on
mentoring new anglers; evaluate existing and future angler education and
recruitment efforts to be sure they are working; target marketing to
specific interest groups with messages that overcome the constraints
that restrict their angling and/or recreation and clearly depict the
benefits that will most appeal to the target audience.
Relating this to B.A.S.S. members, think about whether
the effort your clubs and Federations make to introduce youth to fishing
through one day events would be better directed to developing mentoring
programs. If a B.A.S.S. club mentors a dozen kids a year by taking them
on multiple fishing trips for bass and/or other species, and teaches
tackle rigging, etc., this effort may motivate some of those kids to
remain an angler. You may argue that this strategy is reaching only a
handful of potential anglers! Sure, but if you have a one day event, how
many of the 200 kids crowded around a pond will retain interest without
continued support? This is certainly something to think about. Given how
much we all love angling, wouldn't it be rewarding to think we changed a
nonangler's life by converting him into a B.A.S.S. master?
Contact me if you need anything, at conservation@bassmaster.com
or call (334)272-9530.
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