State Of Florida Pays Bass Fishermen $100 Per Tagged Fish!

Is there any other species?
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Cagey
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State Of Florida Pays Bass Fishermen $100 Per Tagged Fish!

Post by Cagey » Wed Dec 24, 2014 11:09 pm

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http://www.floridasportsman.com/2014/11 ... g-studies/

TrophyCatch & Tagging Studies

by FWC Freshwater • November 25, 2014

By Andrew Dutterer

This basically goes without saying in the Sunshine State, but big bass are a big deal. Trophy bass provide a big part of the identity and draw of our state’s bass fisheries. Florida is often touted as The Bass Fishing Capital of the World, and trophy-sized bass play no small role in this reputation.

Acknowledging the importance of trophy bass in Florida, the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission (FWC) has recently initiated a resurgence in big bass research. As a major action item that was spawned out of Florida’s Black Bass Management Plan in 2011, the FWC launched TrophyCatch, a trophy-bass documentation program that aids research and promotes conservation of trophy-sized bass.

TrophyCatch was designed to address multiple goals for the FWC and its partners, but from a scientific standpoint the program is essentially building a database of where and when trophy bass get caught and released in Florida. As this dataset grows, it will allow the FWC to monitor trophy bass through time and across the state, which will aid in evaluating bass and habitat management actions such as stocking, habitat renovations, or changes to harvest regulations. This will ultimately expand our knowledge of how to grow and manage big bass for Florida anglers.

Angler recognition programs, like TrophyCatch, are not exactly new – other states, including Florida (see Big Catch), have been conducting them for years. However, the FWC has set TrophyCatch apart from other programs by pairing it with a tagging study to ground truth its data.

The trophy-bass tagging study began one year prior to TrophyCatch’s launch. Across the state, FWC biologists have been working together to tag every bass 8 pounds or heavier that we sample during electrofishing surveys, which allow live-release of the bass. Each year, we have tagged nearly 200 bass, and to date, the project has reached more than 95 water bodies across the state, all of them public. This is similar to the broad spatial scale at which TrophyCatch operates, although TrophyCatch also includes bass legally caught from private waters.

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Tagging studies, like this, perform two fundamental functions that mesh together to produce results. One, they create a sub-population of tagged fish that acts as a scaled-down model of the overall population. What happens to our tagged population is considered to be representative of what happens to the overall population. Just like an election poll, a sub-set of individuals is used to predict outcomes for the entire population. Two, it connects anglers who catch tagged bass with scientists who are studying them. To ensure that most anglers report any tagged bass they catch, tag rewards in our study are worth $100.

After catching a tagged bass, anglers report their catch via a telephone number printed on the tag and answer some questions. A primary interest of this study is to determine the fate of tagged fish — was it released or harvested? We also ask if the angler is aware of TrophyCatch and if the angler plans to document his or her tagged bass with the program. Results from tag returns provide insights into what likely happened within the overall trophy-bass population. For example, if we have 100 tagged bass at large for our sub-population and 25 were caught and 10 were harvested that would indicate an annual catch rate of 25% and an annual exploitation rate of 10%. In other words, that would mean that 25% of all bass are caught each year, but only 10% of them get harvested, on public waters.

What we’ve found so far is that from a state-wide standpoint the trophy-bass fishery in Florida operates with a lot of similarity in fishery rates as we see for average-sized bass. In this study we’ve measured annual catch rates around 20-25%, so about one in four or five trophy bass in Florida gets caught each year. This is interesting because a lot of anglers tend to think of trophy bass being hard to catch because of different behavior or above average intelligence. However, this statistic suggests that trophy bass are just as susceptible to being caught as their smaller brethren, but being much less abundant, they are a rarity among most anglers’ catches. Very few of Florida’s trophy bass actually end up on a plate or on the wall.

Annual exploitation rates have ranged from 2% to 5%, meaning that out of 100 trophy bass at large, only two to five were harvested after being caught each year. This is pretty low and likely a little lower than what we observe in smaller bass. This is largely due to high voluntary release rates for big bass. Tagging has shown that about 80% to 90% of trophy bass that were caught were released. These results reiterate that in Florida the catch-and-release ethic among bass fishermen is strong, especially when it comes to trophy bass. Releasing these rarer, older female bass is much more important than releasing abundant young bass that in some cases compete with one another for food reducing the population’s growth rate, which is an important factor in considering new statewide bass rules.

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The trophy-bass tagging study has also proved to be a great way to measure the reach and growth of the TrophyCatch program. We measured a big jump in anglers who are aware of TrophyCatch from its first to second year of operation (31% → 55%) and an even bigger jump in anglers’ participation rate in the program (6% → 24%). These data are great news in that they show growth in the TrophyCatch program. However, because awareness and participation rates are not equal, it indicates that there are anglers who catch big bass and know about TrophyCatch, but choose not to participate.

A major reason may be not having a camera and scale with them to document the catch, so getting word out about the requirements is important. We want as a many legitimate trophy bass as possible to get recorded in the TrophyCatch dataset, and through outreach and communication with our anglers, we hope to see continued growth in the program and less disparity between awareness and participation rates.

From the standpoint of fisheries researchers and managers, pairing TrophyCatch with the trophy-bass tagging study has been exciting and provided useful new information. Because the tagging study informed us about participation rates for TrophyCatch, we can calculate what fraction of all trophy bass caught in Florida the last two years landed in the TrophyCatch records. This allows us to estimate the total number of trophy bass that were caught from public waters in the entire state. Likewise, the tagging study allowed us to estimate the fraction of all trophy bass that were entered into TrophyCatch, and in turn allows us to estimate the number of bass 8 pounds or heavier that existed in state public waters each of the last two years.

The data tell us that about 3,000 out of 21,000 total trophy bass swimming in state waters were caught during Year-1 of TrophyCatch (October 2012 – September 2013), and in Year-2 (October 2013 – September 2014) about 3,300 out of 16,000 were caught. Honestly, these numbers were a little less than most of us probably would have guessed, but we hadn’t estimated trophy-bass catch or abundance until now. The fact that our estimates were similar between years, especially given that TrophyCatch participation rate changed, gives us assurance in our methods. Confidence limits on our Year-2 abundance estimate suggested trophy-bass abundance could have ranged between 8,600 to almost 44,000. Through time, and as TrophyCatch participation increases, we expect our precision in estimating trophy-bass catch and abundance to increase.

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Total trophy bass catch and abundance in Florida are great metrics to have and should prove useful in a number of ways. First, they can help the folks behind the scenes at TrophyCatch and the program’s corporate sponsors prepare for the increased volume of submissions that are likely to come as participation in the program grows. It probably wouldn’t be unreasonable for last season’s verified entries (991) to double or triple in coming years. Second, having an estimate of catch and abundance of trophy bass allows us to delve into economics of Florida bass fishing from a trophy-bass perspective and consider per capita value. Florida’s bass industry was estimated to have a $1.25 billion dollar economic impact in 2011.

If we were to boil down the state’s bass fisheries to only consider trophy-sized bass, it would result in economic values of $60,000-70,000 per trophy bass. Plus, putting a number on the finite number of trophy bass we have in Florida may cause trophy-bass conservation to resonate a little louder with anglers. Lastly, having these estimates will provide a way to evaluate large-scale bass management actions. For instance, the FWC is in the process of considering a proposed new statewide bass harvest regulation, which has been tailored partially to foster growth of more trophy bass. Tracking catch and abundance of trophy bass via TrophyCatch and the tagging study should provide a great gauge of its effects, if the rule is implemented.

Meanwhile, TrophyCatch and the trophy-bass tagging study will continue to keep a finger on the pulse of Florida’s trophy-bass fisheries. To register and get familiar with the submission procedures for TrophyCatch, please check out the website today. It’s a great way to get involved in science and conservation for trophy bass in Florida. If you happen to catch a tagged bass, clip the tag close to the bass’s body and retain the external end for record keeping. It has a unique identification code and telephone number (850-363-6037) for reporting your catch and collecting the tag-return reward.

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Only one comment has been posted to this article, and they claim they have already earned $600.00 to spend on new fishing tackle!

Jason • 24 days ago
Great program, and between my dad and myself, we received $600 from Bass Pro, Dick's sporting goods and Rapala in gift cards and t-shirts also plus it provides valuable info for FWC
Last edited by Cagey on Thu Dec 25, 2014 10:37 am, edited 1 time in total.

Jeffbro999
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Re: State Of Florida Pays Bass Fishermen $100 Per Tagged Fis

Post by Jeffbro999 » Wed Dec 24, 2014 11:32 pm

Nice article. I've been paying attention to this since last year, and its a nice reward for anglers. I see all my local lakes have been surveyed, even our small Blackwater State Forest lakes that are known to hold bass to 14lbs. I guess I need to get back out there with a swimbait again.

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Re: State Of Florida Pays Bass Fishermen $100 Per Tagged Fis

Post by dragon1 » Thu Dec 25, 2014 2:37 am

Cagey...careful buddy. With your mad skills bro, you could end up with some $$$ and strong temptation to pick up some "enthusiast level" gear! 8-)

Thanks for sharing man.

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Re: State Of Florida Pays Bass Fishermen $100 Per Tagged Fis

Post by Cagey » Thu Dec 25, 2014 4:19 am

dragon1 wrote:Cagey...careful buddy. With your mad skills bro, you could end up with some $$$ and strong temptation to pick up some "enthusiast level" gear! 8-)

Thanks for sharing man.
LMAO! Yeah that would be the only way I could afford it! So now I have another reason to go bass fishing!

Notice all those orange "tagging" spots are mostly in my central Florida area too! I'm on it!

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Re: State Of Florida Pays Bass Fishermen $100 Per Tagged Fis

Post by H8R » Thu Dec 25, 2014 4:38 am

Pretty neat! Maryland has something called "Diamond Jim" for strippers up to 25000 bucks, and other prizes.

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Re: State Of Florida Pays Bass Fishermen $100 Per Tagged Fis

Post by Ham Solo » Thu Dec 25, 2014 5:49 am

That's awesome! Hopefully it preserves and even improves the quality of trophy bass.

Looks like I need to take a vacation to Florida. :lol:

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Re: State Of Florida Pays Bass Fishermen $100 Per Tagged Fis

Post by Cagey » Thu Dec 25, 2014 6:02 am

Ham Solo wrote:That's awesome! Hopefully it preserves and even improves the quality of trophy bass.
That is the money quote of the day!

Florida made its reputation on big bass and lots of them back in the 1920's, 30's, and 40's, but by the 1950's, 60's, and 70's Florida's bass were on the decline largely due to habitat destruction, digging drainage canals eliminating marshes that filter contaminants out of the water allowing all of mankind's pollution to just run right into our lakes and rivers and even sewage and phosphates used in fertilizers were all poison to our lakes, rivers and fish.

Mankind poisoned entire lakes and rivers and killed off the fish.

It was nasty in Florida in 1970's! I use to fish the St. Johns rivers near Jacksonville as a kid and all of the accumulated chemicals, sewage, and whatever poison man could dump in there all flowed to Jacksonville before heading out to the ocean. I actually stopped fishing up there when I was catching blue crabs and fish with big black looking cancerous sores on them, crabs with legs missing and black stumps where a leg should be. Fish with missing fins and black cancerous looking stumps where it should have been. It was horrible back in the late 1970's and 1980's up there. None of us would ever stick our big toe in the water up there back then.

And starting in the late 1970's moving forward the state of Florida and others began addressing these pollution issues and trying to reverse the situation and today we have all kinds of new retention ponds to catch polluted water run-off before it hits our quality waters, and a lot of marsh restoration is planned and well underway. Canals are being filled in to restore the natural water flow throughout the state.

So today the FWC and others are trying a long-term massive statewide approach to restoring Florida's bass fishing reputation with recovered lakes and rivers brought back to life such as Lake Okeechobee, St. Johns, and many others- still waiting on Lake Apopka to rebound, and through these efforts Florida wants to bring back the monster bass and big stringers of them once again!

And that is precisely what we are starting to see happen once again in this great bass fishing state! The trophy bass are making a comeback by plan and by design! And I am glad I lived long enough to see it happen and enjoy it once again!

I follow the work of the St. Johns River Water Management District and can only applaud all of their efforts. Here are some of the reports on this situation that us bass fishermen today are taking full advantage of:

Blue Cypress Conservation Area begun in 1977 that includes one of Florida's hottest bass lakes called Farm 13/Stick Marsh:

http://floridaswater.com/landmanagement ... ess_CA.pdf

Here is another great example of this massive effort to clean up Florida's dirty water and restore the quality of our bass fishing:

Orange Creek Basin:

http://floridaswater.com/SWIMplans/2011 ... M_Plan.pdf

You can find the same thing all over the state of Florida and this is money well spent!

http://lakewatch.ifas.ufl.edu/MapList.htm

http://plants.ifas.ufl.edu/manage/overv ... bathymetry

Florida's big bass are back!

But Florida still has a long way to go! One of Florida's worst polluted lakes of all time is Lake Griffin near Leesburg. It is slowly coming back to life. The state actually had to draw down the water level to halfway in an attempt to move the chemical pollution out so it could be refilled with clean water diluting the remaining chemicals. And right now in lake Griffin, the state is "planting" plastic trees on the lake bottom to attract and hold fish for fishermen.

In lake Apopka another horribly polluted lake they actually had to build dykes in the lake like slices of a pie and drain the water out one section at a time and scrape the bottom muck out of the lake since it absorbed so much chemical pollution over the decades it had to be hauled out of the lake. I understand they have done this to other lakes as well in desperate attempts to clean them up so the water quality and fish populations could recover. East Lake Toho got similar clean up treatment.

Lake Okeechobee is today one our state's model lakes for how things can be turned around. And the everglades marsh water flow is also making a turn around as old drainage canals are filled in to allow the natural flow of water across the state and into Florida Bay which all but died thanks to the canal diggers wanting to turn swampland into farms and neighborhoods not realizing how damaging what they were doing back then ruined our natural environment here.

Here is a great report called "The Science Of Restoring The Everglades":

http://dels.nas.edu/resources/static-as ... glades.pdf

http://www.evergladesplan.org/pm/recover/recover.aspx

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Re: State Of Florida Pays Bass Fishermen $100 Per Tagged Fis

Post by dragon1 » Thu Dec 25, 2014 1:23 pm

H8R wrote:Pretty neat! Maryland has something called "Diamond Jim" for strippers up to 25000 bucks, and other prizes.
$25,000 to chase down "Diamond Jim Strippers", eh? :evil22:

Good to hear that FL is aware and committed to restoring habitat and clean water...the Gators and now American Crocs are thankful as well! 8-)

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