Forum 2: Question and Answer - Session 1
John Webb, Biologist, Atlantic Salmon Trust:
Could I ask please whether there is a consensus
within the Group regarding the main purpose of a weekly
close time, particularly for brown trout; and then the
next question then is, irrespective of the demand
possibly for allowing continuation of fishing for 7
days a week, whether biologically it is currently
justified?
David Dunkley: Could I take the first part
of that, and palm the second part off to Peter.
The discussions in the Steering Group certainly did not
indicate any consensus on the idea of a weekly close time
for brown trout, or indeed any other species apart from
migratory trout and salmon. I think maybe others would be
better qualified than I am but I didn't get the impression
that it was something that people thought would have any
significant value.
Repeat of question
John Webb: It's really basically whether brown
trout stocks in Scotland can continue to sustain a
fishery that operates 7 days a week
potentially.
Peter Maitland Well, each fishery must be
treated on its own, that's my view, and I think it's the
consensus view of the Forum, Steering Group, and I think
our belief is that at the end of the day we want local
management bodies which will look after the appropriate
waters and if these waters are over-fished then management
will be able to step in and put bag limits and so on on
their waters; it's the only reasonable way to manage
fisheries. Fisheries information of course we are dependent
on anglers for fisheries information to manage the waters
so there should be a good match between the fisheries data
coming in in terms of catch and the management procedures
needed to try to regulate that catch if it seems to be
damaging the local fish stock.
Rab Lee, Pike Anglers Alliance for Scotland:
It's with regard to Peter's comments about his
ethical concerns for live baiting. Now you were saying
that you think it's cruel because fish feel pain. This
seems to be contrary to some recent scientific study,
but surely if we go down the road if it's cruel to put
a hook in a fish, then why should we be fishing for
them at all if you are trying to catch them on
hooks?
Peter Maitland: Well I think the response
to that is that you have a particular object in catching
fish. You are trying to catch fish, hopefully with minimum
of pain, you are either going to catch them and kill them
to eat or you are going to do catch and release and release
them. The difference between that and live baiting is that
here you are unnecessarily taking live fish, you are
impaling them on hooks and causing them pain.
Rab Lee:
But surely that's the same thing if you are trying
to catch them on a hook you are impaling them on a
hook.
Peter Maitland: Oh, yes you are, but you
are trying to minimise that. Here you are giving the fish
unnecessary pain. It was interesting for me. I tried to see
if there was any scientific data on the catching of pike by
either live baiting or dead baiting. I could only find one
site that gave me information. It was catches of large pike
in the British Isles and it was extremely interesting to me
that all of the large pike where the method was defined
were caught by dead bait. So we are not restricting pike
anglers from catching pike by using dead bait.
Rab Lee: Surely you are though because this is
a legitimate method all over the world?
Peter Maitland: No it's not all over the
world.
Rab Lee:
You've named Ireland and Netherlands , but other
areas, America , Australia , rest of Europe , this is a
legitimate method for catching predatory fish.
Peter Maitland: No that's not true in
North America for instance, there are state and provincial
regulations in North America related to the use of live
bait.
Rab Lee:
But there's not an all out ban which is what you
are proposing.
Peter Maitland: I can't understand anglers
who profess to be interested in fish and regard them with
some interest, give them considerable pain in doing this
and I should say that the most recent research in Britain
from Liverpool has shown in fact that fish do in fact have
extremely sensitive pain sensors and there is no question
that they do feel pain. Anyone who has kept fish and I have
for 60 years can see that in aquarium conditions it's very
easy to see that fish can easily detect something like a
small parasite on their skin, they try and rub this off. If
fish are unwell you can easily tell, just like us they hang
about looking rotten, all the fins are down and so on. So
there is no question that they do feel pain.
Nick Yonge, Tweed Commissioners:
Could you explain what discussion the Steering
Group had about Sunday fishing?
Ron Woods: Do you mean Sunday fishing in
general or in relation to salmon and sea trout where it is
currently prescribed?
Nick Yonge:
Well, in general, but specifically for salmon and
sea trout because there is a considerable discussion about
whether it should be allowed on Sundays because that it is
the day that most people would like to do it but it is the
day when it is most frequently not allowed.
Ron Woods: I think the essence of the
discussion, and again I am happy to be corrected by any of
the Steering Group members, Peter included as the nearest
one, but others as well. The essence of the discussion was
that there is a general perception of conservation benefit
for migratory fish on having a closed day. There was a
feeling among some of the people there, and I think perhaps
particularly the game angling representatives that shifting
that close day to a day of the week when perhaps a higher
proportion of the population wasn't working would be seen
as a social benefit, I think the converse view that was
suggested by some of the perhaps fishery management/fishery
science people in the Group was that in order to have the
same conservation impact you would have to reduce the
angling effort perhaps by 2 days if you were having it on
other days of the week, and also bearing in mind that, and
I have no statistics on this, that a fairly a high
proportion of the population nowadays compared to, say, 50
years ago is free on a Saturday or in fact is working on a
Sunday and free other days of the week that there was no
universal way of managing the close day thing that wouldn't
disadvantage some potential anglers. So on balance I think
the general feeling was to stick with the status quo rather
than create something else that just gave you a slightly
different group of winners and losers.
Peter Maitland: I think the question is,
it's really just what you have emphasised. Do salmon and
sea trout in Scotland need more pressures at the moment?
There's a simple answer to it. No they don't need more
pressure.
Nick Yonge: The question really wasn't so much
there shouldn't be a closed day, but whether that day
should be a Sunday. That's the question I am most
commonly asked.
Peter Maitland: Yes, you are giving that
question because most people are free on a Sunday but that
means a lot of pressure on the fish so if we are taking it
off Sunday as Ron says we need perhaps to do 2 close days
during the week.
David Dunkley - I maybe shouldn't say
anything as Chairman, but I am also a member of the
Steering Group, but I think there was also the perception,
especially with people who are visiting, perhaps for a
week's fishing, you know to have a day off in the middle of
it, or 2 days of in the middle of it, would actually cause
marketing problems as well so, you know, as Ron says, it
doesn't matter which way you carve this up, somebody ends
up with rather less than they want, and as Peter says
probably the last thing that we need at the moment are
increased pressures, increased exploitation levels..
Simon McKelvey, Conon Fishery Board:
Now, I'm sure a lot of people will agree that
movement orders would be very, very useful to control
the spread of alien species around Scotland . But has
the Steering Group got any views on how these licences
would be administered and enforced and how this would
be resourced as well?
Ron Woods: Well this is the kind of issue
that we have constantly come to in the Steering Group.
Whichever aspect of fishery management we discuss we come
round to the same point, how is it going to be managed and
you are going to have to wait until the afternoon to hear
about the management proposals that we have been putting
together and the issue really is that it is likely that
licensing will be done by local management groups. That
seems to me, certainly personally, the obvious route
because it's in local waters that these fish will be put in
and it's the local management group that needs to be sure
any introduction is appropriate. But it is a difficult area
at the moment, the whole management issue is the most
difficult area, it's caused us greatest concern in the
Steering Group and you will hear from Andrew the kind of
issues that we have been coming up with.
Paul Knight, Salmon & Trout Association:
My first point was really the problem of disturbing
salmon and sea trout in a river while fishing for brown
trout in a river, the second point was having an open
season on rainbow trout, I've fished a lot of fisheries in
the south, like the "Itchen" for example which is
a wild brown trout and a rainbow trout fishery. I mean, how
do you reconcile the fact there may be a by-catch of brown
trout in a close season?
Ron Woods: I think the essence of this is
again, and I realise it's beginning to sound like a cracked
record, but I think the essence of this again is contained
within the issues related to local management bodies. And
one of the reasons if I can elaborate, one of the reasons
that there was such a debate in the Steering Group about
close season for grayling for instance wasn't that anybody
was particularly opposed to protecting grayling, but rather
that it seemed impossible to devise some way of preventing
people from fishing for grayling that did not also prevent
them for fishing for trout. And I think something of that
is coming out in the issue that you are saying. My
perception of the Steering Group's view on this is very
much that this is something which has to be dealt with on a
local level. Patently if you have a single species stocked
rainbow trout fishery then it's not an issue and aside from
anything regarding the conservation issue which is
non-existent in relation to rainbow trout one presumes that
it is reasonable to allow people to make their living as
best they can by allowing fishing through the year. If you
have a water where there are brown trout and there is a
serious danger of destructing the brown trout fishing, then
it is a question of how that is managed for the best
interest of the fish population in the water as a whole,
and again I think the same thing is true perhaps in
relation to the brown trout and coarse fisheries in waters
that also contain migratory species. It may be that there
has to be some limitation placed on angler effort or
whatever. The advantage of, I'm stepping ahead here, so
forgive me. The advantage of some of the things that we are
talking about in terms of local management is that by
having local management bodies where there is much more
integration and a much more holistic look you don't end up
with a situation where you have the salmon proprietors
wanting to do something for the preservation of the salmon
angling but not having any co-regulation over the fishing
for the other species or indeed vice versa. So hopefully
you will be encouraged by some of the things that come out
this afternoon that will help to address that. But I think
the bottom line is that it's got to be locally, you know
there is a different solution for every water.
Eric McVicar, Salmon and Trout Association: Question
for Peter Maitland
Some years ago "Coregonus Lavaretus" were
transferred from
Loch Lomond to Caron Valley , obviously with Powan
being an endangered species this was done ostensibly for
their protection, would you say that future operations of
that nature would be sanctioned under some sort of
provision on the movement of fish?
Peter Maitland: Well all fish movement in
the future, if we have proper legislation, will be done
under licence and you've mentioned the transfer of Powan to
Sloy and to Caron Valley that was done under licence
because as you say the Powan is a protected species so in
order to do this transfer I had to go through a number of
hoops, I had to make sure that scientifically the transfer
was acceptable both in terms of what is happening in Loch
Lomond and what is happening in, say, Loch Sloy. I had to
get a licence from SNH to handle this fish and move it and
I also had to get clearance from the Hydro Board for Loch
Sloy, the owners of Loch Sloy, so I would see this as being
entirely the kind of situation that one would hope might
pertain for any movement of fish in the future whether they
are rare and protected or whether they are common.
Alexander Fell, Forth Foundation:
Has the Steering Group considered the
inconsistency in the legislation for brown trout and
sea trout when current scientific advice suggests that
they really are one in the same?
Peter Maitland: Yes, we have considered
some aspects of that. Just from a personal point of view, I
raised the issue in relation to the economic study that was
done in relation to fisheries in Scotland and I maintain
that we should try to separate the value of sea trout and
brown trout on the one hand and salmon on the other as
being two species so that we can have a clearer idea of the
importance of salmontrata as against salmonsala but we
haven't really discussed it. The others in the Steering
Group may well come in and I'm sure we'll get some advice
from the chair. We haven't discussed this in detail.
Alistair Hume, Dee District Salmon Fishery Board:
For the last while there have been one or two
rivers looking at views of maybe trying to extend their
season and I noticed on the Steering Group Report that
"retain current annual close season provisions
including flexibility to adjust at local level". Is the
view to clarify the point of flexibility at local
level, is the idea being that local boards if they are
still in place can do that or would they still be
looked at having to go through SEERAD.
David Dunkley: That sounds more like a
sort of technical/legal issue. I think that the way the
legislation is framed at the moment District Salmon Fishery
Boards can apply to Scottish Ministers for changes in the
annual close time. When we were talking about enabling
provisions and flexibility that's the sort of mechanism
that I still had in mind in that instead of being
absolutely prescriptive and saying on the face of any Act
when the annual close times will be that it will be
something similar to what we have for salmon at the moment
which is annual close time of a continuous period of not
less than 168 days, but of course as you know each salmon
fishery district has slightly different starting and
stopping times. I still think personally, but the Steering
Group, indeed the Forum, are perfectly entitled to comment
on this that there is a useful set of checks and balances
in the system whereby Boards can make applications but the
Instrument is made by the Ministers because that allows for
proper full public consultation and advice to be taken from
statutory advisers as to whether or not that is in the best
interests of sustainable fisheries. So, I think the
extension to other things like grayling and coarse fish and
what not, you know we were thinking along the same sort of
lines in that rather than being absolutely prescriptive
with dates in the face of the Bill that we would be
providing enabling powers so that Scottish Ministers could
make these things upon application a case having been made.
But that is as I see it, I don't know if that fits with how
the rest of the Steering Group thinks.
Rob Murray, Pike Anglers Club of Great Britain:
Recently the Environment Agency in England and
Wales stated there were no grounds to ban live baiting
on an animal welfare basis. Does it not just prove the
fact that all that is needed is education to ensure
anglers do not translocate fish?
Peter Maitland: Well, education is
extremely important no matter what legislation we have, we
obviously need to have education among people, but of
course you don't need too many people moving fish to cause
problems, possibly only one bucket of rough into Loch
Lomond. There have been bans in England as you know in
Cumbria.
Rob Murray; Yes, but not on animal welfare. They
were banned purely on the basis that there are endangered
species of fish in that water, and they did it to protect
those species.
Peter Maitland: Yes, that true but the
point is that fish were transferred there and in terms of
trying to monitor what is going on it is going to be
extremely difficulty for anyone monitoring this to ensure
that the bucket of perch, say, that an angler is using
beside him has in fact come from that lake as opposed to
being brought up from the south or whatever.
Rob Murray: But in the North West where the ban
was put in they already had legislation to prevent the
live baiting being done by fish outside the area
because they had the Section 30s in place. It was the
lack of policing that caused translocation. If people
know there is a chance they're going to get checked
then they won't move fish. It's the same as it's now
illegal to use a mobile 'phone when you're driving a
car, but how many people do you still see doing it
because nobody's getting prosecuted for it. If you put
laws in place to prevent the translocation of fish but
still allow live baiting and you catch people with
buckets of fish in the car and you prosecute them and
get headlines then you'll discourage other people from
doing it. You don't have to ban live baiting to prevent
it.
Peter Maitland: I accept that's an
important approach but of course my second issue is the
ethical one.
Rob Murray: Well as I say again England and
Wales say there is no grounds to ban live baiting on an
ethical basic.
Peter Maitland: Yes, well I'm afraid I
can't agree with that.
Alastair Stephen, Institute of Fisheries
Management:
Following on from that comment about Section 30
down South, I was wondering whether we've got
representatives of the EA here that we could hear
comments about how they feel that the Section 30
restrictions on movements of fish actually works
because I think it may be very useful to see what
resources are required up here to do a similar or
better job?
Cameron Durie,
Environment Agency. We have had control of
fish movement by a consenting process for decades now in
England and Wales, and like all legislation it works up to
a point. Where the legislation doesn't work is for the
people who wish to bypass the consenting process so we've
still got some people who want to stock fisheries without
obtaining the necessary consents, without worrying about
what the disease status of the fish they are getting is,
without really being too bothered about what species come
in the truck. So you've got people who deliberately try to
bypass the system and essentially whatever type of
consenting process you have it won't deal with that
question. That's an enforcement question which more or less
along the lines we've just heard from the other side of the
room. But the other problem we had particularly, a specific
problem which has also been touched on, related to pike
angling. And we do have a particular problem with pike
angling because the general situation in England and Wales
is that if somebody catches the fish in the water that they
are intending to fish then they are entitled to use those
fish as bait whether they are undersized or not. So that
general provision exists. And the majority of people who go
pike fishing comply with those provisions but there is
still a substantial body of pike anglers who find it easier
to take the fish from their garden pond when they go
fishing or from the local canal than waste time when they
get to the venue at the other end to start your fishing
exercises, and we had so many problems in our rare fish
waters in the Lake District that the only way we could get
round this was to actually introduce a ban on the use of
freshwater fish as bait whether those fish were alive or
dead for the sort of reasons that Peter's gone into that
you cannot prove where those fish came from when you come
across somebody on the bank of the lake or loch or whatever
in question. So the only argument we could come up with was
purely a conservation argument. We didn't deal with the
ethical issue about animal welfare and so on because that
was deemed to be outside the role that the Agency had been
given. Not that the Agency had a stance on animal welfare,
it was deemed to be outside the area we were entitled to
consider. So really there is no intention at the moment to
introduce a general live bait ban in England and Wales
other than the specific conservation type of cases that
have already been talked about, and I suppose my question
which I'll take the opportunity to ask now is whether in
fact in Scotland you want to think about a general process
that applies everywhere or whether you actually want to
give your rare species extra protection that the general
ecology may not need, or you think may not need?
Peter Maitland: I'm not sure that I can
respond to that properly but perhaps I can give an example
which might sort it out a bit. The Powan which has been
mentioned already occurs in only two lochs in Scotland.
Loch Lomond and Loch Eck. In Loch Eck there are also Arctic
Charrs so it is an extremely important Loch for both Powan
and Charr. Very fortunately there are no pike in Loch Eck
so there has been no pike fishing in Loch Eck and
consequently there has been no introduction of coarse fish
there. So the fish community there is a pristine community
as it was post the ice age in Loch Lomond as I have already
mentioned yes there are pike, many pike anglers seeking
specimen pike and we now have an additional 6 alien species
established there and causing massive changes in the
ecology of Loch Lomond. So I think that comparison gives
you the kind of problems that arise from one loch to
another and of course one of the troubles is that most of
our rare fish lakes in Scotland, in England and in Wales,
have already, because most of them have pike in them, they
already have alien species established in them so in many
cases it is really too late to do anything. We try to save
the more pristine, especially the Northern waters and I'm
not talking about important in terms of rare fish here I'm
talking about important in terms of the salmonid fisheries
which are important economically there that we protect
these from alien species.
David Dunkley: As always with these
things, we could go on questioning and answering for ages
and ages and ages but time is our enemy. Could I ask you to
please take as much advantage as possible of the feedback
sheets
Michael Brady, Chairman and Secretary of the Loch
Lomond Angling Improvement Association: We have
the task of managing the freshwater and the migratory fish
stocks throughout Loch Lomond. In the year, just to give an
example, there were anglers from Southport who regularly
come up to fish Loch Lomond and it was them during the
early 80s that started the introduction of various species
of fish, not content to see pike, perch and roach as some
of the best pike fish in the world, they wanted to change
that fishery into something else. My water bailiffs in 2002
and in 2003 had caught coarse anglers coming up with large
white containers with oxygen tanks installed inside them
with barble. Their task was to put into the lower river end
rate barble. We have other instances of this in other parts
of the Loch so the regulation of fish movements is
essential. But what the chap over there said is absolutely
correct in terms of policing. In game angling there is a
cost and in our particular area there is a large cost which
the game angler has to pay with regard to poaching and the
number of anglers because you are in a heavily populated
area fishing without a permit. Now that cost is laid on to
the game angler and he accepts that. The freshwater angler
at the moment doesn't even pay for a ticket. A lot of them
think that they should continue to get it free and if they
do decide through the Scottish Office having regulation and
legislation to allow us because at the moment we don't get
one single penny of money coming in for the freshwater
fishing in Loch Lomond which is absolutely disgraceful
because Scottish Office legislation hasn't legislated to
allow us to make it mandatory to purchase a permit. Now if
that takes place and you get the permit and the income
coming in where does the money come from ….
David Dunkley: Well can I stop you there
Michael because these are things which are going to be
going as part of the proceedings later on today when we get
into management and funding and things.
Michael Brady: Yes, I agree. But the point
is of course where does the money come from. The coarse
anglers should pay for their two problems if they want to
continue with live bait they pay for it through increased
permit prices.
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