Freshwater Fisheries Ecology 2015
DOI: 10.1002/9781118394380.ch36
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Recreational fisheries in inland waters

Abstract: Recreational fisheries represent the dominant fisheries sector targeting wild freshwater fishes in all industrialized nations and are becoming increasingly popular in some emerging economies. The socio-economic benefits of recreational fisheries are numerous and substantial. Recreational fisheries through their practices (e.g. overharvest, habitat change, release mortality, stocking and dispersal of non-native fishes), however, have been implicated in negative effects on populations and ecosystems. In inland w… Show more

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Cited by 38 publications
(38 citation statements)
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References 83 publications
(126 reference statements)
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“…; Cowx ; Cooke et al . ). The socio‐economic importance of recreational fisheries often remains unnoticed in many emerging economy countries, and consequently governance structures have not sufficiently developed to cater for the unique social‐ecological characteristics of recreational fisheries.…”
Section: Recent Developments In Recreational Fisheries Science and Mamentioning
confidence: 97%
“…; Cowx ; Cooke et al . ). The socio‐economic importance of recreational fisheries often remains unnoticed in many emerging economy countries, and consequently governance structures have not sufficiently developed to cater for the unique social‐ecological characteristics of recreational fisheries.…”
Section: Recent Developments In Recreational Fisheries Science and Mamentioning
confidence: 97%
“…Changes throughout the world are forcing inland fisheries managers to seek new approaches to cope with current and future climates and ecosystem and social challenges (Arlinghaus, Lorenzen, Johnson, Cooke & Cowx, ; Cooke, Arlinghaus, Johnson & Cowx, ; Hunt et al., ). Reservoirs are relatively novel, artificial and heavily modified water bodies with many characteristics and functions that are not comparable to natural lakes and might require different approaches and solutions (Blabolil et al., ; Launois, Veslot, Irz & Argillier, ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Such a perspective emphasises the role of fishers in an ecosystem in a biological sense and considers catchability to be community‐ and density‐dependent, even though anglers should be potentially more flexible than other predators. The literature presents fishery responses in a complex manner that often depends on socio‐economic utilities, for example, recreational benefits or access costs (Arlinghaus, Mehner & Cowx, ; Cooke et al., ; Hunt, Arlinghaus, Lester & Kushneriuk, ; Hunt, Sutton & Arlinghaus, ). Unfortunately, the majority of the research is single species‐oriented, primarily focused on the conservation or sustainable exploitation of angler target species (Carpenter, Munoz‐Del‐Rio, Newman, Rasmussen & Johnson, ; Johnston, Arlinghaus & Dieckmann, ; Kaufman, Snucins, Gunn & Selinger, ) and is not able to provide much evidence for fish‐angler interactions at the community level.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…On the other hand, inland fisheries can be substantially enhanced where access restrictions are acceptable and technical means available (e.g., juvenile fish for stocking from the aquaculture industry). In many developed countries, inland fisheries provide not only food but also lucrative recreational fisheries (Arlinghaus and Cooke 2009;Cooke et al 2015;Tufts et al 2015) and are increasingly being recognized as sources of livelihood support in developing countries (Bower et al 2014;Barnett et al 2015).…”
Section: About Inland Fisheriesmentioning
confidence: 99%