| Researchers with
the Pennsylvania Fish and Boat Commission (PFBC) and Penn State University are hoping a pilot study
using specially tagged fish will help them reel in data about smallmouth bass fishing pressure and harvest
on the Susquehanna and Juniata rivers.
“The objective of the pilot tagging study is to estimate catch-and-release
rates of smallmouth bass on the Susquehanna River as well as harvest rates,” said Leroy Young, PFBC Fisheries
Management Division chief. “This will give us better information than is currently available on the effects
of alternative regulations on the smallmouth bass fishery. The results of this initial tagged fish study
will also help us determine if a larger effort along these lines would be worthwhile in 2008.”
The data, coupled
with data obtained from a related angler use and harvest study, will greatly enhance the agency’s understanding
of the fishery and thus aid it in making future fisheries management decisions. Tagged bass are marked
with tags that look like a piece of plastic spaghetti trailing behind the pectoral fin. These tags were
specially designed so that bass that are caught multiple times can be reported.
The first time a tagged
bass is captured, and an angler intends to release the fish, the angler should clip off the outermost
portion of the tag and leave the inner portion of the tag containing duplicate information. Anglers
should retain the tag and call the toll-free phone number listed on it. Anglers should not pull the
tag out of the fish because doing so may injure the fish.
If the bass is captured a second time, the remainder of the tag can be removed
and the fish released. Anglers harvesting bass should be on the lookout for both the spaghetti tag as
well as a small anchor button under the skin when filleting fish as they may have taken a bass that was caught and
released twice before and no longer bears an external tag. Those finding anchor buttons in harvested bass should also
call the toll-free phone number printed on the button.
All tags must be reported no later than December 31, 2007.
The tagged smallmouth
bass study is part of a larger research project designed to measure catch, harvest, economic expenditures
and angler opinions associated with fishing on sections of the two rivers for the period April through October. The
Susquehanna River survey reach extends from Sunbury to the Holtwood Dam near the Maryland border. The survey reach
on the Juniata River extends from Port Royal to the mouth near Duncannon.
Creel clerks have already begun to interview anglers at access
areas using a statistically structured sampling design. In visiting access areas, clerks will ask anglers
about their fish catch and the amount of time spent fishing. Creel clerks will also ask how much anglers spend on
travel (gasoline and hotel costs), fishing tackle, and other gear such as bait. Finally, anglers will be asked about
their satisfaction associated with fishing and their feelings about public and private access on these rivers. In
addition to these on-the-water interviews, airplane flyovers will be conducted three times each week to count anglers
and boaters who use the river.
“This
is a large scale effort to get important information on what is widely considered to be one of the best
riverine fisheries in the nation,” said
PFBC Executive Director Doug Austen. “The results of the survey will provide valuable information that can
then be used in setting the management directions for species such as smallmouth bass, catfish, walleye,
carp, rock bass and American shad.”
The
Statistical Consulting Center at Penn State worked with the Commission to develop methods to estimate
angler effort over the course of the fishing season.
“The Fish and Boat Commission has really stepped up to
the plate on this study because we are using some of the newest technology available,” said Duane Diefenbach,
professor of wildlife ecology, and assistant leader of the Pennsylvania Cooperative Fish and Wildlife
Unit at Penn State. “We
are using some of the same techniques that we developed for the hunter surveys done in the state – flying planes
up and down the river counting anglers wading and fishing from shore and from boats.
This research is
similar in theory to a three-state turkey study being done in New York, Ohio and Pennsylvania that Diefenbach
is also the principal investigator on, working with the Pennsylvania Game Commission and the other states’ resource
management agencies. “The
state agencies are responsible for collecting and tagging birds, just as the Fish and Boat Commission
will collect and tag fish for the bass-tagging study,” Diefenbach said. “Penn State is responsible for
data collection and analysis. The Fish and Boat Commission will begin tagging fish in the rivers in
late May.”
This
is the second large-scale river angler survey the PFBC has undertaken in the past decade. In 2002, Pennsylvania
partnered with the neighboring states of New Jersey, New York and Delaware to measure catch and harvest
of all fish species on the Delaware River and Delaware Estuary. That survey revealed significant recreational activity
on that river. The Delaware River survey documented that approximately 120,000 angling trips occurred on the tidal
and non-tidal portions of that river combined from March 17 through October. |