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ObjectiveDuring the COVID‐19 pandemic, 2020 Texas fishing license sales were 25% higher than those in 2019, with over 200,000 first‐time anglers. To better understand this unprecedented cohort of new anglers, we conducted an online survey to examine motivations, behaviors, preferences, and barriers to participation.MethodsWe invited 60,000 anglers to participate in a self‐administered online survey by e‐mailing an invitation to anglers from the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department customer license database.ResultSixty‐eight percent of survey respondents were new anglers recruited during the COVID‐19 pandemic, while the remaining 32% were retained anglers that began fishing before the pandemic. Compared to the typical retained angler (i.e., White, male, 45–54 years old), new anglers were 1.9 times more likely to be female, twice as likely to fish in freshwater, 2.8 times more likely to be younger than 44 years old, and more likely to identify as Black or African American (1.9 times) or as Asian or Pacific Islander (2.8 times). New anglers were motivated to fish to spend time with family and friends and were less likely than retained anglers to keep the fish that they caught (1.5 times), to fish from a boat (1.5 times), to fish more than an hour from home (1.4 times), and to renew their fishing license (3.9 times). License sales of survey respondents in 2022 showed that 68% of retained anglers purchased another license, while 51% of new anglers purchased another fishing license.ConclusionIn summary, new anglers differed significantly from retained anglers in terms of sociodemographics, motivations to fish, preferred amenities at fishing sites, and the challenges they face to continue fishing. To retain these new anglers, novel approaches are likely needed, which may include targeting specific demographics with more beginner information about fishing and directing users to sites with their preferred amenities.
ObjectiveDuring the COVID‐19 pandemic, 2020 Texas fishing license sales were 25% higher than those in 2019, with over 200,000 first‐time anglers. To better understand this unprecedented cohort of new anglers, we conducted an online survey to examine motivations, behaviors, preferences, and barriers to participation.MethodsWe invited 60,000 anglers to participate in a self‐administered online survey by e‐mailing an invitation to anglers from the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department customer license database.ResultSixty‐eight percent of survey respondents were new anglers recruited during the COVID‐19 pandemic, while the remaining 32% were retained anglers that began fishing before the pandemic. Compared to the typical retained angler (i.e., White, male, 45–54 years old), new anglers were 1.9 times more likely to be female, twice as likely to fish in freshwater, 2.8 times more likely to be younger than 44 years old, and more likely to identify as Black or African American (1.9 times) or as Asian or Pacific Islander (2.8 times). New anglers were motivated to fish to spend time with family and friends and were less likely than retained anglers to keep the fish that they caught (1.5 times), to fish from a boat (1.5 times), to fish more than an hour from home (1.4 times), and to renew their fishing license (3.9 times). License sales of survey respondents in 2022 showed that 68% of retained anglers purchased another license, while 51% of new anglers purchased another fishing license.ConclusionIn summary, new anglers differed significantly from retained anglers in terms of sociodemographics, motivations to fish, preferred amenities at fishing sites, and the challenges they face to continue fishing. To retain these new anglers, novel approaches are likely needed, which may include targeting specific demographics with more beginner information about fishing and directing users to sites with their preferred amenities.
Recreational fishing is a popular activity that has many social and economic benefits. Monitoring has traditionally centred around measuring fishing effort and catch. However, contemporary measures, such as fisher demographics and behaviours, which may be linked to social and economic objectives, are now recognised as necessary to meet expectations that all aspects of resource use are considered for fisheries management. The challenge for recreational fisheries is how to regularly provide information across a growing diversity of metrics, and at a scale relevant to specific fisheries, with limited resources. The Blue Swimmer Crab (Portunus armatus) is one of the most commonly recreationally harvested species in Western Australia. This species served as a case study to explore if data from five broad‐scale phone‐diary surveys between 2011–2012 and 2020–2021 could be adapted to meet expanded information needs. Twelve discrete fisheries represented small spatial‐scale areas for fisheries management, with some variation in management arrangements (i.e., bag limits). Robust estimates of traditional and contemporary measures could be produced for three fisheries: Peel‐Harvey Estuary, Swan‐Canning Estuary and Geographe Bay. Traditional measures of participation, fishing effort, total catch and harvest from 2011–2012 to 2020–2021 were generally consistent for Swan‐Canning Estuary but decreased for Peel‐Harvey Estuary and Geographe Bay. The proportion of harvest from recreational and commercial fishing varied from mixed use (Swan‐Canning Estuary, Peel‐Harvey Estuary) to recreational only (Geographe Bay). Variation in contemporary measures was also evident, with recreational fishing largely undertaken by local residents in Swan‐Canning Estuary, while participation was more uniform between local and non‐local residents in Peel‐Harvey Estuary and Geographe Bay. We found that broad‐scale surveys could be successfully adapted to meet the growing need for information on contemporary measures to support a holistic approach to sustainable fisheries management for small spatial‐scale recreational fisheries.
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