Warmwater Stream and River Fisheries in the Southeastern United States: Are We Managing Them in Proportion to Their Values?

Abstract
We compared findings on stream and river fishing activity in the southeastern United States from the 1991 National Survey of Fishing, Hunting, and Wildlife-associated Recreation with those on stream and river management programs in this region from a 1995 survey by Warmwater Streams Committee of the Southern Division of the American Fisheries Society. Based on the 1991 national survey, two-fifths of all anglers in the Southeast fished streams and rivers; almost one-fourth of the total number of days fished by southeastern anglers were in this water type; and more than half of all trip expenditures, including those associated with lakes, reservoirs, and ponds, were made by stream and river anglers. In comparison, southeastern state agencies reported in 1995 that they allocated 10%–19% of their total fisheries budget and an average of 5 people to programs that manage stream and river resources. Approximately one-third of the states had completed fish inventories of less than one-third of their stre...

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