Preliminary report on the coarse fishery status in the River Lune with particular reference to the Lansil Fishery

This study takes a preliminary step towards investigating the reports of poor rod catches of coarse fish in the River Lune. These poor catches and concern over the possible loss of coarse fish from the Lower Lune is investigated, using creel census data from 1991. Historical data is used where available for comparative studies. The conclusion that this report comes to is that there is a problem with the recruitment of coarse fish within the population. Dace, roach and bream all show good growth rates but only poor if any recruitment. Historical investigations suggest that roach and bream may never have successfully recruited without artificial induced conditions. The situation with dace is of more concern as populations in other rivers in Northern England are also in decline, whilst historically they were naturally recruiting.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Other Authors: National Rivers Authority
Format: monograph biblioteca
Language:English
Published: National Rivers Authority North West Region 1992-11
Subjects:Ecology, Fisheries, Limnology, England, Lune Catchment, Coarse fish, Rivers, River fisheries, Fishery surveys, Population characteristics, Scales,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1834/24627
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:This study takes a preliminary step towards investigating the reports of poor rod catches of coarse fish in the River Lune. These poor catches and concern over the possible loss of coarse fish from the Lower Lune is investigated, using creel census data from 1991. Historical data is used where available for comparative studies. The conclusion that this report comes to is that there is a problem with the recruitment of coarse fish within the population. Dace, roach and bream all show good growth rates but only poor if any recruitment. Historical investigations suggest that roach and bream may never have successfully recruited without artificial induced conditions. The situation with dace is of more concern as populations in other rivers in Northern England are also in decline, whilst historically they were naturally recruiting.