Investment in Fishery Resources Provides Positive Returns
All indicators seem to point to a banner season for ice fishing in the state of Maine this winter. In fact, with the exception of some waters, ice fishing in the state seems to have been improving steadily over the past few years. Improvements like this certainly didn’t happen by accident.
I’m confident that the quality fishing we’re seeing today is the result of a smart investment made by people in the state of Maine, and further investment in our fishery resources could result in far better fisheries than we see today.
In 2002, the people of the state of Maine voted by a hefty margin to pass a $7 million bond issue to improve and revamp the aging infrastructure of the state’s fish hatcheries. As a result, many more fish are stocked, and are stocked at a larger size in Maine waters today than any time in the recent past.
I was working as a creel census clerk for the Maine Department of Inland Fisheries and Wildlife during the years that the bond issue results began to take effect, and fall yearling brook trout were stocked for the first time on a local lake that supports a popular fishery for salmon and lake trout. The new fall yearling experiment proved extremely successful, and the number of people we documented fishing for trout on the lake increased astronomically. Such increases weren’t limited to local lakes, however, and new stocking practices have resulted in much better fishing conditions statewide.
Investment in our fishery resources should not be limited only to fish production and stocking. Much of Maine’s fisheries are driven by wild and native fish populations, which are very difficult to manage with the limited staff within the Department of Inland Fisheries and Wildlife’s Fishery Division. Maine employs somewhere around 30 fisheries biologists statewide, less than 10% of the fisheries staff in states like Minnesota. Investing in the hiring of more fisheries biologists and field sampling equipment would allow Maine’s fisheries resources to be managed such that they provide a much better return to the angler, increase fishing opportunities, and drive more tourism and fishing activity in the state.
I’ve never been a fan of big government spending. However, I think there’s a big difference between dumping money into government programs that provide few public benefits, and investing in proper management of our resources that should provide a positive return to the public and bolster the economy. I may be wrong, but I believe that investing more money in fishery resources would be a wise decision for any state interested in promoting its outdoor resources.
Posted on 6th January 2008
Under: Fish Hatcheries, Fish Management, Political Issues, State Fish and Wildlife Agencies | 2 Comments »

