Proactive management
by Pete
Maina
Mandatory release (i.e. proactive regulations that require
release of all fish, a majority of fish, certain
size-structure ranges in a fish species…) is a popular
management tool.
There are many variables – each specie and fishery with its
own uniqueness – as to where and how special regulations
should be established. And total catch and release in many
cases is not necessary or preferable. It all boils down to
each individual water’s current makeup; each individual
specie’s numbers and size structure. State-wide or
provincial blanket regulations don’t cut it. And this is why
we have folks called fisheries specialists who monitor such
things and therefore, hopefully, make the correct management
calls.
In a very basic sense, protecting certain species of fish
from overharvest becomes more important we move to larger
fish, farther up the food chain (therefore lowest
densities), and as we move farther north – where fish grow
slower – and it gradually becomes less and less feasible to
replenish fisheries artificially via stocking. When we are
talking about slow-growing fish like pike or muskies, or a
big-fish species twice as slow-growing like a lake trout,
decades (not years) are required to rebound from
overharvest.
Proactive fisheries management is important here. This means
“protect” a tremendous resource. Sadly, still to this day,
in many places regulations are reactive. This means things
got all screwed-up … fisheries got damaged … to the point of
angling interest diminishing or flat ending… and then, there
is “reaction” with protective regulations, stocking
possibly, but sadly, it’s too late. And it takes time to
fix.
Proactive management simply means installing harvest
protections prior to resource depletion. It works – and it
works in all aspects – as it’s far easier to open up to more
harvest “if” a species’ population gets high, as compared to
attempting to “fix” a crashed population. I can only hope
that more folks will take notice of the simple fact that
quality fishing is what “everyone” wants. There are folks
who still vehemently rally against proactive regulations
(however they still desire quality fishing). The most
popular and politically correct arguments heard repeatedly
are “it’s a tradition” and we need to “get kids into
fishing”. Of course kids are a great excuse on the surface
(stories of the poor kid “having” to release his first or
biggest fish – virtually ruining the child’s psyche – an
event likely to be the sole cause for a life of video games,
drugs and trouble with the law), but the reality is I’ve
never met a kid who was against catch and release (the exact
opposite is true, actually). The messenger is the problem.
Kids, even more so than adults – like to watch their bobber
go down (rather than stare at a floating one on a “keep all
you want” water) and catch big fish. Keeping some fish to
eat should never be an automatic negative, but neither
should be – proactive regulation that protects species from
overharvest.