This article was produced and financed by Nofima The Norwegian Institute of Food, Fisheries and Aquaculture Research

Marine fishing tourist Greta Søeborg from Denmark is satisfied with the big cod she caught off the island of Reinøya in Troms. (Photo: Bjørn Tore Forberg)

Fishing tourists release small cod

Tourists release or throw out as much as 60 percent of the coastal cod caught in Northern Norway.

Denne artikkelen er over ti år gammel og kan inneholde utdatert informasjon.

Nofima The Norwegian Institute of Food, Fisheries and Aquaculture Research

Nofima is a business oriented research institute working in research and development for the aquaculture, fisheries and food industry in Norway.

Marine angling tourists have to a large extent been targeting the coastal cod stocks in the north.

In contrast to the healthy stock of North-East Arctic cod, the Norwegian coastal cod has for several years been on and off the Norwegian “Red List” for threatened species.

This attracts attention from Norwegian fishery management authorities.

"There is a need for new regulations and handling guidelines so the fish may be released in a way that it survives," says Scientist Trude Borch at Nofima.

Trude Borch. (Photo: Nofima)

In a newly published article in Fisheries Management and Ecology researchers discuss how marine fishing tourism should be regulated within the scopes of sustainable management of marine fishing resources.

The cod was either too small or too big

Marine fishing tourism is a growing industry in Norway. In order to secure continued sustainable growth in this sector of the Norwegian tourism industry, it is important to introduce follow-up measures from both fishery management and the tourism industry."

"The industry’s part in this must be to convey knowledge about the regulations and provide advice to the tourists about how to handle the fish to increase the survival rate of released fish,” says Borch.

Is it the international trend of catch-and-release or is it the Norwegian regulations that contribute to marine fishing tourists throwing back over half the catch of cod in Northern Norway?

“The survey data shows that regulations aimed at protecting the smallest cod is a partial reason for releasing fish."

A total of ten percent of the tourists that were interviewed stated that they released the cod because it was under the minimum size (regulatory catch-and-release), while 60 percent of the tourists responded that they released the fish because they regarded it as “too small”.

A further nine percent responded that they released the cod because they already had "too many fish".

Somewhat surprisingly, one percent responded that they released the cod because it was “too big”, either too big to use as bait or too big to be suitable as food.

Want to increase the survival rate

The release of cod in marine angling tourism can in part be traced back to the Norwegian regulations introduced as a result of pressure from the commercial fishermen’s special interest organisations.

In 2006 Norwegian fisheries authorities introduced an export quota of 15 kg of fish fillets per person. In 2010 a minimum landing size regulation was introduced for recreational and tourist fishing. Both these regulations were introduced as part of a new management regime for Norwegian coastal cod.

Given the lack of knowledge about the survival rate of released coastal cod, the authors of the study claim that a 60 percent release rate can be a worrying trend.

The article concludes that providing the marine fishing tourists with handling guidelines in order to increase the rate of survival may be one of several solutions to this problem.

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