4.6 Article

Overturning stereotypes: The fuzzy boundary between recreational and subsistence inland fisheries

Journal

FISH AND FISHERIES
Volume 23, Issue 6, Pages 1282-1298

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/faf.12688

Keywords

consumptive motivation; fish consumption; food security; freshwater; nutrition; recreational fishers

Categories

Funding

  1. European Union through the EMFF
  2. State of Mecklenburg Vorpommern [B 730117000069, MV-I.18-LM-004]
  3. Federal Ministry of Education and Research
  4. Fonds de Recherche du Quebec-nature

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Inland recreational fisheries provide socio-economic benefits and contribute to human nutrition, but the lack of data on harvest and consumption makes it difficult to quantify their contributions. Unreported consumption is likely a hidden contributor to food security, especially among food-insecure fishers. This paper highlights the importance of considering recreational fisheries as food fisheries in policy and management.
Inland recreational fisheries provide numerous socio-economic benefits to fishers, families and communities. Recreationally harvested fish are also frequently consumed and may provide affordable and sustainable but undervalued contributions to human nutrition. Quantifying the degree to which recreationally harvested fish contribute to food security and subsistence is impeded by lack of data on harvest and consumption and by the difficulty in differentiating among recreational and subsistence fisheries. Recreational harvest records tend to be limited to wealthy, food-secure countries and well-monitored fisheries with clear regulations or permitting systems. These records often neglect components of recreational harvest among food-insecure fishers who are potentially more likely to have consumption as a motivation. Here, we highlight the 'fuzzy boundary' that can exist between inland recreational and subsistence fisheries and argue that unreported consumption is likely to be a hidden contributor to food security in some populations. We draw on local case studies from around the world to highlight specific instances where recreationally harvested fish species contribute food and subsistence benefits to participating communities. We use these examples to highlight the diversity of ways that inland recreational fisheries contribute to human nutrition, knowledge gaps in understanding recreational fishing for food, and consequences of not accounting for them as food fisheries in policy and management. The aim of this paper is to draw the attention of resource managers and policy makers, create greater social awareness of the importance of recreational fisheries and bring to light this hidden contribution of inland fisheries to nutrition and subsistence.

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