Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Can Management Reduce Harvest Inequality in Recreational Fisheries?
View through CrossRef
Abstract
Harvest inequality, a situation in which most of the fish are harvested by a disproportionately small number of anglers, is a characteristic of most recreational fisheries. Harvest inequality develops when a few anglers harvest a very large number of fish or when many anglers harvest few fish. Identifying the cause of harvest inequality is critical to understanding the potential for management to reduce the inequality. Management efforts aimed at reducing the top anglers’ take will have only a modest impact if the harvest inequality is actually caused by many anglers harvesting no fish. We measured harvest inequality in 20 years of creel census data from a trout stream in southeastern New York. We calculated Lorenz curve asymmetry coefficients (S) to test whether harvest inequality was attributable to small harvests by many anglers or large harvests by a few anglers. Harvest inequality in the fishery was consistently high and the S-value was always less than 1.0, indicating that harvest inequality was caused by many anglers harvesting no fish rather than by few anglers harvesting many fish. This influence becomes stronger with increased harvest. We conclude that management is unlikely to influence the magnitudes of harvest inequality in recreational fisheries because regulations do not target the principal cause of harvest inequality.
Received May 10, 2012; accepted October 29, 2012
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Title: Can Management Reduce Harvest Inequality in Recreational Fisheries?
Description:
Abstract
Harvest inequality, a situation in which most of the fish are harvested by a disproportionately small number of anglers, is a characteristic of most recreational fisheries.
Harvest inequality develops when a few anglers harvest a very large number of fish or when many anglers harvest few fish.
Identifying the cause of harvest inequality is critical to understanding the potential for management to reduce the inequality.
Management efforts aimed at reducing the top anglers’ take will have only a modest impact if the harvest inequality is actually caused by many anglers harvesting no fish.
We measured harvest inequality in 20 years of creel census data from a trout stream in southeastern New York.
We calculated Lorenz curve asymmetry coefficients (S) to test whether harvest inequality was attributable to small harvests by many anglers or large harvests by a few anglers.
Harvest inequality in the fishery was consistently high and the S-value was always less than 1.
0, indicating that harvest inequality was caused by many anglers harvesting no fish rather than by few anglers harvesting many fish.
This influence becomes stronger with increased harvest.
We conclude that management is unlikely to influence the magnitudes of harvest inequality in recreational fisheries because regulations do not target the principal cause of harvest inequality.
Received May 10, 2012; accepted October 29, 2012.
Related Results
From managing fish to managing people: requirements for effective fisheries governance and management in Europe
From managing fish to managing people: requirements for effective fisheries governance and management in Europe
Despite the increasingly successful implementation of stock management under the EU Common Fisheries Policy, managing fisheries in a sustainable, integrated, and coordinated way re...
Active Management of Walleye Fisheries in Alberta: Dilemmas of Managing Recovering Fisheries
Active Management of Walleye Fisheries in Alberta: Dilemmas of Managing Recovering Fisheries
Abstract
Managers of the recreational fishery for walleyes Sander vitreus (formerly Stizostedion vitreum) in Alberta, Canada, face an unusual combination of very low...
“DNISTER” REGIONAL LANDSCAPE PARK - IN THE TERRITORIAL RECREATIONAL NETWORK OF PODILIA
“DNISTER” REGIONAL LANDSCAPE PARK - IN THE TERRITORIAL RECREATIONAL NETWORK OF PODILIA
The publication considers the peculiarities of the nature of the regional landscape park "Dnister", the landscapes of which have been influenced by economic activity. According to ...
MANIFESTATIONS OF INEQUALITY IN THE ACADEMIC ENVIRONMENT AND ON THE LABOUR MARKET AND COMMUNICATIVE TECHNOLOGIES FOR OVERCOMING IT
MANIFESTATIONS OF INEQUALITY IN THE ACADEMIC ENVIRONMENT AND ON THE LABOUR MARKET AND COMMUNICATIVE TECHNOLOGIES FOR OVERCOMING IT
Fedoryshyna L.M., Makartetska V.S., Rohozha A.O., Havrysh A.V. MANIFESTATIONS OF INEQUALITY IN THE ACADEMIC ENVIRONMENT AND ON THE LABOUR MARKET AND COMMUNICATIVE TECHNOLOGIES FOR ...
Resilient recreational fisheries or prone to collapse? A decade of research on the science and management of recreational fisheries
Resilient recreational fisheries or prone to collapse? A decade of research on the science and management of recreational fisheries
AbstractAre recreational fisheries resilient to harvest or prone to collapse? This paper reviews research published since that question was posed by Post et al. (2002, Fisheries 27...
Small-scale fisheries in Madeira: recreational vs artisanal fisheries
Small-scale fisheries in Madeira: recreational vs artisanal fisheries
Small-scale recreational and artisanal fisheries are popular activities in the Autonomous Region of Madeira, and to date no information is available on their impact on regional coa...
Fisheries Science and Its Environmental Consequences
Fisheries Science and Its Environmental Consequences
Fisheries science emerged in the mid-19th century, when scientists volunteered to conduct conservation-related investigations of commercially important aquatic species for the gove...
BASICS OF CREATING TOURIST AND RECREATIONAL ZONES
BASICS OF CREATING TOURIST AND RECREATIONAL ZONES
Problem statment: The article discusses the theoretical and methodological foundations of creating tourist and recreational areas, formation criteria, the study of natural, environ...

