A lake is way more complicated than studies of a single species. However, it is my experience that people care less about the natural aquatic environment if there is a lack of sport species in that environment. Fishing for sport and recreation vastly improve our waterways, lakes, and ponds.
The biggest issue I see in my area are foreigners that don't understand that there are limits set on the size and number of fish you can keep. They take home everything they catch.
Personally I like to see a tournament where no electronics is allowed , go out there and fish blind just your wits and your tackle no other aids other than your boat.
@@TalynCam any fisherman that's worth anything can. It takes a real fisherman to figure out how to fish it that day without needing to see exactly where the fish is and how they react via livescope.
Mosquito lake and Portage are both a testament to properly managed lakes. Those two lakes get a LOT of pressure and even an average angler can have a decent day catching a limit. Great video as usual.
Why doesn't Ohio DNR stock Largemouth or Smallmouth bass in lakes. They will stock saugeye, which dont reproduce, as well as Muskie but I have yet to hear of them stocking Largemouth or Smallmouth in lakes. There are tournaments on our lakes targeting these every weekend but you never hear of Saugeye, Muskie, Crappie or other species being targeted in tournaments. It would seem to me that if the mortality of LMB is as bad as you say then they should be stocking to replenish the stock. I think they should also limit tournaments during the spawn. Portage and Mosquito might be properly managed but Caeser's Creek lake in my area of Ohio is also known as "The Dead Sea".
One issue not addressed and has been studied is that of bass catchability. Some bass are just not suspectable to being caught. And these traits are passed down to their offspring. By killing catchable bass in one way or another, uncatchable bass populations increase. One of these studies was done with two ponds. All the fish caught were tagged. They drained the ponds, put all the bass that had been caught in one and the bass that were never caught in another. Guess which one pond was impossible to catch bass in? Here in Souther California, our lakes have been subjected tremendous pressure for decades. There are some organized tournaments (not clubs) with some very good fisherman where the entire field blanks. That never happened 20 years ago.
@@fishwhistler758well the only human residents that left California are the undesirables so if the bass could do that also that would be great. California has a way with letting the trash take itself out
Really, do those Bass go to school to learn that trait? Bass and all fish have a pea brain, they do not think, reason, or make decisions until they bite my hook.
I’m too old to care for a boat. And I actually enjoy bank angling. Never been on any boat and at my age why start now? Not really anything to do with money. But believe whatever you want. Cheers!
Talked to a local (NE Oklahoma) fisheries biologists a while back about Crappie. He mentioned that holding a larger Crappie by the jaw and then trying to crank it up level....without supporting the body with other hand, normally will break its jaw or at least dislocate it. Fish can no longer feed properly and probably die. Same was basically true for Bass. If you wanted that photo op....hold it hanging straight down or support with both hands.
True, in Switzerland is forbidden to grab the fish by jaw or mandíbula, if u do, that fish will die after release, more education is needed. Also grabbing the fish with wet bare hands is enforced, this preserves the slime on the skin that protects the fish from infections.
My family had an 7 acre pond and some days we would catch and release 50+ bass and we would never see dead bass floating and we didn't have turtles in the pond to eat dead fish. We also never caught bass with dislocated jaws...
One solid way to reduce bass mortality it to use circle hooks. Not popular at ALL. And I've probably lost some fish due to it, but not a single gill hook, swallowed hook or snag. I don't even need to use pliers to remove them. Secondly, stop holding big bass by just their bottom jaw. Any fish over five pounds is getting injured that way.
How well does that work for bass, would you say it’s 75% as effective? 90%? I hadn’t fished inshore for bass since I was a kid, exclusively used circle hooks while fishing jetty’s and inlets for years. But now I’m living on a lake and doing a lot of small bass fishing. I didn’t know circle was an option, wondering how it works!
@over1498 I think it's about 80% as effective but I might be using the wrong size circle hooks for fish in my area. Or it's a skill issue on my part. Idk.
Circle hooks are pretty ineffective when used with lures. A circle hooks works when the fish swallows the bait, turns, and swims. The hook gets pulled out and gets caught in the corner of the mouth. Especially with hard baits, bass realize the lure isn't food and split the lure out before they turn and swim away. Then you also have to consider most bass are caught in areas with a ton of weeds. You can't rig a circle hook to be weedless
Decades ago Arkansas Game and Fish came to a local slough to do a fish count. I've been told by an old timer that before the AGFC did their fish count that the slough was a really good place to fish, needless to say after the fish count it became a place where catching a fish was rare. It still to this day hasn't recovered.
Makes me wonder why they did the count in the first place. Maybe a company was dumping in local waterways, or there was an introduction of some invasive species.
The launches by us have 100’s of trophy size bass floating after tournaments because they were bounced around in a livewell all day. Tournaments need to all be catch and immediate release if they want to see the lakes thrive and true trophy sizes become available.
That’s awesome. I’m kind of a converted salmon/steelhead guy and have found certain things we do to prevent wild fish kill also translate well to bass. I started pinching barbs (required in my state for salmon/steelhead) and started using hooks with a different gap to help keep fish hooked rather than barbs.
Another thing, which might sound stupid, is I avoid certain lures that fish tend to hit aggressively and swallow. Football jigs and Carolina rigs are examples.
Thanks for doing this to illustrate the decline that I’ve experienced as well. I think theprocess of stuffing 4-5 trophy smallies in a box and all the stress that goes with that is too harmful for those old beasts. I think catch and release is the only hope we have. MLF does it right
The ned rig is the worst and I’ve caught so many “helmet head” small largemouth that have had their jaw reconstructed from a 5/0 flipping hook. the slack line hookset some of these guys throw with braid they dam near rip the head off of little guys. They feel a nibble and they load up for the strongest hook set they can. Requiring barbless hooks would somewhat help.
Thank you for this collaboration. Considering the compounded effect over time, bass would be highly concentrated at their release sites, potentially leading to their entire population being caught within a few years, especially if one-third were caught in just a single year.
Bass migrate back to where they were caught in a couple weeks, a conservation study proved this, only thing that slows them down is bait fish or crawfish
When everybody wises up and uses the layout we use in kayak tournaments, mortality will be NEAR ZERO PERCENT!!! We use Tourney X (as do several pro circuits like MLF) to record the gps location of the photo taken with the fish on a certified, official rule board, time and date of photo, and best of all, the photo MUST BE ACCEPTED by non-competitor judges who cerify the fish was measured correctly, that the identification number for the event is correct, and most importantly, that the fish appears 100% alive. They may even ask for extra photos if there is any question, so we take three or four of each fish, and release them IMMEDIATELY where they were caught! Not removed from their beds and hauled 80 miles down the lake in a small box with four other terrified bass, bumping and banging in the ride of their life, literally. Wise up people!!!!! We are beyond having to have weigh-ins! We should at LEAST consider only bringing our largest fish in, because TourneyX automatically tallies our 5 longest for the day.
i believe he is forgoing the inherent stress deaths that happen with fishing that can be seen in catch and release. I think thats less of a factor in alot of cases than what he was saying with fish being stuffed in a livewell for inperson weigh ins, fish experience a lot more stress in that than just a quick picture and off into the water.@@charlesmoore9970
@@charlesmoore9970 Also, missed the part were was it 2 of the studies said that it was only causing a loss of 1% to 3% a year and was considered negligible. Where as the ones who catch and eat the limit would have a higher impact on the lakes fish. Especially when they go for a weekend with their family and relatives and 5+ kids and pull in limits for every person and kid they have each day they are there. And you see 20 other "families" doing the same thing that weekend. This weekend is any weekend you personally finally get time time to get to the lake, thus for them it is every weekend because they are always there doing this...
As a Texan I am happy our fisheries are so well managed. Great video! I wonder if you could follow up with a few additional stats taking into consideration the juvenile population of bass as well. While a 38% figure may sound high, it's hard to judge without at least an estimation of the TOTAL population of fish. Legal in this case would be a 14 inch plus fish. As long as the juvenile population can sustain fishing, there is hope in deed that my kids and grandkids will enjoy fishing for many years to come!
In any subject, always refreshing to hear someone actually referring to facts, statistics and studies, instead of just coming up with their own conclusions based on concepts in their head.
Socal is already ruined. All of our major lakes are so highly pressured it's always a skunk fest. The bass won't hit anything artificial. They are smart. Also, the fish are gone! Certain groups or types of people keep and eat everything they catch, regardless of size or species.
The fish are not gone. Bass aren’t even native to socal lol. And I highly doubt they’ll be extirpated. If anything it’s good they’re not responding to lures. Like you’re complaining about not being able to do the same thing that you hate others doing. Does that not strike you as being incredibly selfish?
I have not been skunked in 8 years😂 I go fishing about once or twice a month at a bunch of lakes in Socal... You must just suck, I don't even use a live scope 💀
@@giantchasers no there clearly isn’t lmao. Georgia has a ridiculous amount of bass. You’re clearly just as much to blame for them being harder to catch than everyone else.
The scientific videos are my hands down favorite. I don't care if it is about fish populations, angler impact, bass phisiology, etc. They're all my favorite and, Tyler, you do a solid job presenting them.
It's always good to have data from the fisheries biologist surveys. I had the opportunity to speak with a Wisconsin DNR person about 6 weeks ago. He let me know that the day prior catch of a trophy walleye was actually surveyed the previous year. It had a pec fin clipped. I had several pics on my phone and didn't notice that
Went fishing Saturday on Tennessee River. Couldn’t buy a fish on the bank or normal spots. Threw out IN the middle of the river and caught a 4.3 Smallmouth. Sometimes the fish ain’t where we are casting. They’re somewhere else I found out. Just saying 🤔😁
Great video. It takes time to fully dive into a paper and understand them as well as you do, and then to make a high quality video. Good job and thanks
Although this has nothing to do with my fisheries, I truly love watching informative videos like this. See im in Mexico, anglers out here would say its useless but to me all this information allows me to better understand my opponent and work as a team if that makes any sense 😅
@@smittyINChow do you figure? Snakehead ended up in the lakes due to aquarium releases (same as introducing goldfish into the lakes). The Asian carp were initially used to control pests in places where fish are farmed for commerical sales, and ended up in the wild. So unless someone he has dumped their domestic fish into the wild waters, or contribute to farmed fish consumption, they are not at fault.
As a pond owner, I was shocked by some of the statistics. This year, on a 4-5 acre pond(depends on rain amounts). I've taken out over 180 predators, mostly bass. I've been doing that for over 5 years & my relative weights have continued to go up. Im growing footballs now. Comparing my bass population to Sam Rayburns(my pond is about 90 miles away) is at least triple that of Rayburn's? That doesn't make sense to me? Maybe there is a study on that? Also we rotetononed a acre pond back in the 1970's. It brought back memories when you mentioned it. Thanks for the information.
Nice to see this video got posted! I've been waiting for another study video to happen, it brings light to important topics and addresses myths in fishing (Also first comment)
One factor not considered is the loss of natural habitat due to overdevelopment on these lakes. Commercial and residential properties with trucked in sand, rocks or concrete blocks disturb the natural environment and can have huge impacts around spawning habits along the shorline. Weeding machines, agriculture, excess sediment and fertilizers also negatively impact the water columns that feed these bodies of water as well. When I was younger, many of the small to medium size lakes throughout Wisconsin were minimally developed and you could fish from the bank almost anywhere you wanted. Now it's all developed with vacation homes, and if you don't have a boat your only option is the boat ramp.
Unfortunately I think if you want bass to catch in the future it's going to take a lot more hatcheries and stocking. It doesn't seem like the population can stand up to the pressure. But the economy is dependent on the fish, and fish are important to the ecosystem. So the only solution I can think of is stocking fish.
I guess I am just old school. I was always taught never to kill an animal if you are not going to eat it (or for defence of course) I'd rather 100% of the fish that are killed eaten than even only 10% of those caught dying for sport
I'd like to see a video along these same lines but having to do with the chemical contamination of the bass in a given lake. I ask because here in Arizona, some of our fisheries are so contaminated with mercury that our Arizona Game and Fish department has a dedicated webpage they call their, "Fish Consumption Advisory." That page lists the bodies of water and the types of fish and the amounts of those fish that one should or shouldn't consume. I'm sure Arizona isn't the only state with this kind of pollution in the water that affects the fish themselves, it also affects those who consume them. Other states must have similar problems.
The mercury in many Arizona lakes are natural. The high concentration is caused by the total volume of water decreasing drastically. I would not call it "pollution" but it certainly is a human issue.
38% of the entire population were caught in a fishery? That's an insanely high rate, I would have guessed something like 5-10% were caught over the course of a year.
Bass have bold/shy personalities that are passed down to generations. You’ll most likely never catch the shy fish and over time fish will become more shy/harder to catch. Also 38% in ONE year is a ton
That is total crap. Fish don't have personalities - they have instincts that make them fish. Understanding those instincts will help you to catch them dummy.
This video really opened up my eyes. I usually never eat fish, it is my sport and escape from the world. I will def make small changes to help the sport live on forever.
Very interesting! Obviously every lake, habitat, species, populations are different. I'm sure the smaller the lake the harder it is on it. I've found a small lake that has some amazing largmouth in it, & it doesn't have a ton of pressure at all. It's full 4-8lb bass. I've caught a 8.6 a 9.3 & my current PB an 11.4 this summer. I've also seen a guy with a 13 lber which was the biggest largmouth I've ever seen in person. It fishes very tough though. Spend lots of days getting only a couple bites to getting skunked. But I finally think I started figuring out how to key in on the bigs there. They are big smart bass for sure, not easy to catch
It’s not that the foreigners ‘don’t know’, it’s that they don’t care. If they get in trouble, they aren’t worried ab the fish, they’re worried ab being caught as an illegal.
Those numbers of bass caught by tournament anglers will now sky rocket with FFS (Forward Facing Sonar). I may be wrong but the more readily available this technology becomes the more it will effect fish populations that never ever see a lure. I also agree areas with weigh in stations do hold many of those fish let go for quite awhile and in my fishing experience a portion of those fish get caught afterwards by folks that keep them. Although this has cause some bass leagues to bring those fish back out into the lake away from the boat ramps where they are safer. Still as the saying goes their is plenty of fish in the sea/lake! Lol... You did your homework! Very interesting and eye opening video!! Fish on!!
EDIT: The error was corrected 😀 Is the grammatical error in the title intentional? Not being a jerk - just commenting early in case you wanted to correct it. If it's just to generate comments like the one I'm typing now, carry on I guess lol
As far as the Connecticut study. We don’t have large lakes and even less big enough to hold tournaments. That said the lakes mentioned receive heavy fishing pressure all season long.
That’s a awesome study. Well I know for a fact that a PFA ( public Fishing Area) have plenty of bass even with very heavy pressure, that there is plenty of fish in them because you can’t catch them! 😅. The people that run the PFAs over stock the fisheries with bait fish and the bass look at your lure and turn the other way😂.
Our Tuesday night league has about 30-40 boats every Tuesday night. They only use two lakes in the rotation. Both lakes have become terrible to fish. Both lakes use to be amazing bass lakes. I love to fish and love the Tuesday nighters but I worry we are killing the fish off. Both of these lakes are significantly smaller then the lakes in your video. Love your videos Tyler! Best on the internet! Thanks for your work!
I really appreciate your channel. Your platform fills a past due niche in the bass fishing conversation. You set yourself apart by bringing this information to anglers. The studies are great. It’s the most important topic in all of fishing. We need to understand the toll that 1 individual can dish out on the sustainability of our favorite sport. Forgive me for making anything political, but It’s okay to be conservative and pro environment at the same time. This isn’t a debate, it’s just a choice. Are you going to leave the hook in that fishes mouth? Are you gonna cut a snag after working on it for a minute? You gonna leave all that fishing line behind? Are you going to be pro active and pick up that fishing line that is bunched up in the weeds left by the bum who fished there yesterday? Or maybe even confront people that you see disrespect our sport, and tell them why you think it’s important to fish differently. It’s okay to let people know how fish should be handled. We all want these fish to thrive, and not hook them into extinction. I’m glad to see content like this!
So, we have 2 of the studies say that tournament fishing and catch and release fishing was only causing a loss of 1% to 3% a year and was considered negligible. Where as the ones who catch and eat the limit would have a higher impact on the lakes fish. Especially when they go for a weekend with their family and relatives and 5+ kids and pull in limits for every person and kid they have there, each day they are there. And you see 20 other "families" doing the same thing that weekend. This seems to be almost every weekend fishing is possible.
AnglingBuzz just had a great video on ice fishing for crappie. If you hook them at 40ft and pull them up, they have a very high mortality rate. Better to keep them for dinner and limit out, then catch and release 40 fish. At least in this one situation.
Yes, because shocking them with electricity is actually better for them than a hook. It doesn’t sound right but its true. And this data is important anyway.
I fish Sam Rayburn all the time. It’s my home lake. I can confidently say that the bass population is sustainable if not growing. Having fished tournaments that have the lake looking like a city i can also say that most of the bass we catch are keeper size! Very exciting stuff. More on Sam Rayburn please!
Makes no sense, some tournament anglers will pre fish and they catch the exact same fish that they prefished for none of those are dying . I would say the only thing killing fish is the boat slamming them around the livewell during runs. No kidding, fish are gonna die when theyre being sloshed around. Ever bought a pet fish from the store and it died the first night you got ir because you were rough with the waterbag going home in the car. Its like if someone took one of us humans, and put us inside a shaker machine that just grabs us and shakes us violently as hard as we can handle and then just expects us to be okay... Guts are being churned
Except they literally are dying. Just because fish have been caught multiple times doesn’t mean that’s wrong. You’re making the mistake of using personal anecdotes to try to argue against a scientific study. Nobody ever said every bass dies that is caught and retained. Just that some of them do. Also, is it really that hard for your brain to understand that stuffing a fish into a box with no ability to move and being hooked up to a clamp for 8 hours, only to be stuffed in a bag and held out of water for multiple minutes- can kill them? Like seriously? You gotta use your head and just accept the fact that you kill fish when you catch them sometimes, instead of denying even the possibility that it happens. You’re seriously gonna argue with a scientific study because you can’t bear to admit that you’ve killed fish?
38% of the bass population gets caught every year .. to me that means every bass in that lake will be caught in under 3 years. That seems like a big number to me, but as long as most of them don't die when released, it will just make fishing them that harder after every bass will feel the poke of a hook in a short time.
Where I fish in Lake Michigan I am convinced that a significant percentage game fish of various types are born and die naturally without seeing a lure or bait (mainly talking smallmouth, northern pike, walleye, and lake trout). Since the decline of gill netting that threat has diminished, too-that was seriously destructive and remains so for, say Pacific steelhead and salmon. For example, nobody used to fish for smallmouth. Now they are under intense pressure. Where I fish, certain types of smallmouth with shallow water habits have come under noticeable pressure that definitely affected their numbers and behavior. Lake Michigan is very clear so fisherman can sight fish for these shallow water smallmouth. But meanwhile, smallmouth who mainly suspend and follow deep water gobies or alewives or other baitfish (or only feed at night) can do that without seeing a lure. Smallmouth have also been known to spawn in deeper water on reefs that elude visual bed fishermen. In my view, it is the pressure on particularly easy game fish that I think you are seeing. In smaller rivers or lakes fisherman can definitely “fish them out” or significantly affect fishing, often driving the game fish to feed at night, another habit that avoids pressure. But in larger lakes and rivers the fish have a lot of choices and can avoid fishing pressure and still thrive. It’s just harder to find them-and harder for fisheries biologists to find them too. These are just my theories as I’ve spend a lot of time pursuing these “other” fish groups and I think we have a lot to learn about them. Pro fishermen tend to be on the leading edge and have proven that many fish even in very hard-fished lakes and river systems were simply never pressured by local fishermen. But they found them, mostly in so-called “offshore” areas. Do you realize how many offshore areas exist in a body of water like Lake Michigan? Too many to fish. Modern electronics are allowing some of us to find these fish with open water feeding habits and catch them. But in my view they are much harder to catch and find, and should do fine as long as forage remains adequate and relatively safe spawning habitat can be found. Again, just my two cents. 😊
I grew up on a small pond and fished small fisheries my whole life, pay attention during bed season, you will almost always see the same fish on the same spot year for year. Some fish will die from catch stress but I’ve only seen it after a drawn out fight where the fish swallowed the hook, and even then I’ve caught bass poopin out old jerry rigs which were removed properly and disposed into my panfish bag
A big problem is that many anglers use too light of line especially those who use monofilament and when that big one bites they break off and that fish has a high mortality rate. This takes a lot of trophy type bass right out the fishery.
From the videos i see on youtube you guys got it good. Veeeery good, you still have places to go and actually catch fish. In my country there is no control and people are either ignorant or dont care and just keep everything no matter the size "it will fill up the pan". However most of the damage is done by the "professionals" using dragging nets and they as well dont care about the laws, they have destroyed the Mediterranean they even use nets in lakes even though its illegal. And also the trash people leave behind... you have no idea. Hope you guys keep respecting your waters so you can keep fishing in them. tight lines.
Good Video. Have got an issue with the categories particularly the Recreational and Catch and Release. There are many recreational fishermen who catch and release, particularly trout/salmon/steelhead fly fishermen. So to lump them into a 100% kill recreational category is inaccurate at best. Would highly recommend having a specific category of “Subsistence” fishermen as 100% kill.
In the south you should also consider that the higher temperatures likely add to stress. Warmer water has less disolved oxygen typically and that will add to the stress. On top of that pollution in lakes plays a role as well in terms of stress. (I'm a fresh water ecologist and tournament angler for catfish)
Interesting study ..great information. Fishing is a great hobby and is relaxing for our mind and body.. With more people fishing all over the world..off course there are major impacts..studies let’s us know of the pressures we are creating .
As important as this information is. I think there are some other things to consider as well. I can't speak for these lakes, but the lakes in my area deal with somethings that I'm sure also effect the numbers. One of the largest is flood control lakes and lake turn over. We had a major one here on a lake that's minutes from my home. There was barely an inch of bank that didn't have dead fish of all species on it. We also have lakes that aren't very deep and are sprayed every so often to kill grass off for a lot of reasons. That is forge and hiding habitat for a lot of species which BASS need for growth and survival. Some BASS may die shortly after being caught or release due to being weak from mal nourishment. The old, final nail in the coffin if you will. Another consideration is lake stocking. BASS aren't always at the top of the food chain and some species that are added will eat BASS and BASS are cannibals' and will eat each other as well. I think BASS death and survival is more connected to the body of water versus specific human intervention. We have lakes around here that get a lot of pressure and still produce very good BASS fishing. While others get a lot of attention, regular stocking, even very water specific slot limits. Yet despite that has some of the worst BASS fishing despite stricter harvest rules and less pressure.
I think a major factor in mortality rates in tournament fiahing is releasing them away from where they were caught. They may have been local to that particular area or obviously there foraging on prey. You release them into an area where there are already local bass and prey in the area is limited and already “spoken for”. You add in the factors of being hooked deep and being kept in a livewell all day and mishandling of the fish. All factors in. Im mot against tournament fishing whatsoever. But w the rise in angling on any level along w advancements in technology, we need to adjust w these changes w conservation in mind. And that’s where the trye debate begins. Personally, id argue an immediate catch and release system for tournaments would go a long way. Logistics are the hurdle there. But it’s not impossible
I always wonder why tournament anglers bring the fish back for weigh-ins. Why can’t they just have a marshal on board, weigh the fish when they are caught and then release them. Seems like that would be a lot less shock for the fish.
Yeah, but then they couldn't get that COOOOOL pic with their whole bag and that bigass 6 foot check! Seriously though...I've wondered the same thing. I guess they figure the marshal would ruin the broadcast content and marketing pics if they had to shoot around him...or her.
Honestly, it makes a lot of sense to have a tournament offical on board. I get that it's probably a pain for the guys fishing, but it's a competition. Having a ref to enforce rules and certify/register catches immediately seems like a reasonable measure to keep competitions fair.
@@ShafikKassam exactly! Better yet: make a separate "official's bracket" in the tourney will token prizes (I don't know, $300 +name on a plaque, give the tournament competitors a "best guide award" for the biggest ref caught fish). Have the actual competitors validate the officials' catches so they aren't just sitting there bored stiff. They could rotate officials once a day so they can't collude with any team. I'd imagine that there would be a lot more willing volunteers, and you wouldn't have a repeat of the Lake Erie sinker scandal.
Something to be added to the "tournament angler" is that they have culled to retain only the largest and those are the ones at the highest risk. The guy that is going to eat the fish, keeps all but is not focused on a high weight to compete with peers and the chances of that dinner table fisherman going all over an entire lake to grab the biggest is pretty slim. I am in the 100% catch and release category.
Good video👍...those 30 -40% catch rates are much higher than I expected and it's a significant amount. The problem where I live where lakes can be 30 acres to several hundred acres is poaching and illegal harvest..many good lakes have been diminished because of it.
I grew up on Rayburn and that lake just keeps fishing better year after year hopefully this low spell it’s having will refresh the lake and give it another “boom” like it did back in 2011 I think that was the really low year
It should be mentioned that a lot of amateur fishing began during Covid. I’m sure the watch rates of your videos reflect this too. I have noticed in most small lakes and ponds in my area, after the first year of Covid, almost all of the big bass were gone. Which is crazy, bc everyone was texting their photos with them around just the spring prior. I know from some of the videos of catching these bass that they were mishandled, and that they were kept out of the water for inappropriate periods for people who just can’t live without getting a freakin photo. It’s not as noticeable in places that have always had high pressure, but it’s incredibly noticeable in very small bodies of water. And yea I know this is anecdotal, but it’s the reason I personally have almost entirely stopped taking photographs with my catches. I give myself 10 seconds to get all fish back into the water, so unless the hook just pops right out, I don’t have time, in order to follow my own rules. It’s also the reason I never use treble hooks anymore. So what if it makes catching more challenging? I’m up for it.
As a St. Clair native, I've never seen fish in as rough of shape as this year. All those sores you see are mostly from banging around livewells all day.
Great video. Was there an estimated die off on Sam Rayburn from tournament anglers and catch and release anglers? I guess if you use the same rate as the northern lakes 400,500 x 32% x 3% = 3,844 which is very small especially compared to harvesting.
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A lake is way more complicated than studies of a single species. However, it is my experience that people care less about the natural aquatic environment if there is a lack of sport species in that environment. Fishing for sport and recreation vastly improve our waterways, lakes, and ponds.
Here in Canada, your daily limit is also your possession limit. You cannot go out and keep more fish without consuming the fish from your freezer.
Cops these days will shoot or give your DUI + jail time due to this hat on the claim of 'I smelled alcohol'
The biggest issue I see in my area are foreigners that don't understand that there are limits set on the size and number of fish you can keep. They take home everything they catch.
You from metro Detroit area?
Report game law violations!!! It’s up to YOU!
Happens alot..
@@bradleyrussell1973fish and game doesn't like to bother foreigners. They don't want any discrimination suits.
Here in nor cal it's the Asians and the Mexicans
Personally I like to see a tournament where no electronics is allowed , go out there and fish blind just your wits and your tackle no other aids other than your boat.
I mean this isn't uncommon most guys look for there spot visually
@@TalynCam any fisherman that's worth anything can. It takes a real fisherman to figure out how to fish it that day without needing to see exactly where the fish is and how they react via livescope.
Mosquito lake and Portage are both a testament to properly managed lakes. Those two lakes get a LOT of pressure and even an average angler can have a decent day catching a limit. Great video as usual.
Why doesn't Ohio DNR stock Largemouth or Smallmouth bass in lakes. They will stock saugeye, which dont reproduce, as well as Muskie but I have yet to hear of them stocking Largemouth or Smallmouth in lakes. There are tournaments on our lakes targeting these every weekend but you never hear of Saugeye, Muskie, Crappie or other species being targeted in tournaments. It would seem to me that if the mortality of LMB is as bad as you say then they should be stocking to replenish the stock. I think they should also limit tournaments during the spawn. Portage and Mosquito might be properly managed but Caeser's Creek lake in my area of Ohio is also known as "The Dead Sea".
One issue not addressed and has been studied is that of bass catchability. Some bass are just not suspectable to being caught. And these traits are passed down to their offspring. By killing catchable bass in one way or another, uncatchable bass populations increase. One of these studies was done with two ponds. All the fish caught were tagged. They drained the ponds, put all the bass that had been caught in one and the bass that were never caught in another. Guess which one pond was impossible to catch bass in? Here in Souther California, our lakes have been subjected tremendous pressure for decades. There are some organized tournaments (not clubs) with some very good fisherman where the entire field blanks. That never happened 20 years ago.
Totally agree. Castaic lake is hardly producing large bass like back in the day. Pyramid also.
The bass probably migrated out of califiornia like human residents. 😂
@@fishwhistler758well the only human residents that left California are the undesirables so if the bass could do that also that would be great. California has a way with letting the trash take itself out
The humans brought their bass with them to the other two more friendly states.
Really, do those Bass go to school to learn that trait? Bass and all fish have a pea brain, they do not think, reason, or make decisions until they bite my hook.
I’m a catch and release bank angler only guy. Appreciate you sharing videos like this. I learn a lot from them.
Just say you can’t afford a boat😅
I’m too old to care for a boat. And I actually enjoy bank angling. Never been on any boat and at my age why start now? Not really anything to do with money. But believe whatever you want. Cheers!
@@Urmothasmothasmotha bro literally anyone can afford a boat. The issue is the work dealing with the boat....
@@ykonratev time is money bud
@@JustJoshua73 you’ve never been on ANY boat? Age don’t really got anything to do with that. sounds more like you’re afraid of being on the water.
Talked to a local (NE Oklahoma) fisheries biologists a while back about Crappie. He mentioned that holding a larger Crappie by the jaw and then trying to crank it up level....without supporting the body with other hand, normally will break its jaw or at least dislocate it. Fish can no longer feed properly and probably die. Same was basically true for Bass. If you wanted that photo op....hold it hanging straight down or support with both hands.
True, in Switzerland is forbidden to grab the fish by jaw or mandíbula, if u do, that fish will die after release, more education is needed. Also grabbing the fish with wet bare hands is enforced, this preserves the slime on the skin that protects the fish from infections.
I feel like I'm in the minority of people who don't feel a need to take a picture of a fish I'm not keeping.
@@notthelake Only if it's a PB
So many people on the fishing subreddits hold them level one handed by the jaw, makes me cringe every time.
My family had an 7 acre pond and some days we would catch and release 50+ bass and we would never see dead bass floating and we didn't have turtles in the pond to eat dead fish. We also never caught bass with dislocated jaws...
One solid way to reduce bass mortality it to use circle hooks.
Not popular at ALL. And I've probably lost some fish due to it, but not a single gill hook, swallowed hook or snag. I don't even need to use pliers to remove them.
Secondly, stop holding big bass by just their bottom jaw. Any fish over five pounds is getting injured that way.
How well does that work for bass, would you say it’s 75% as effective? 90%?
I hadn’t fished inshore for bass since I was a kid, exclusively used circle hooks while fishing jetty’s and inlets for years. But now I’m living on a lake and doing a lot of small bass fishing.
I didn’t know circle was an option, wondering how it works!
@over1498 I think it's about 80% as effective but I might be using the wrong size circle hooks for fish in my area. Or it's a skill issue on my part. Idk.
Circle hooks are pretty ineffective when used with lures. A circle hooks works when the fish swallows the bait, turns, and swims. The hook gets pulled out and gets caught in the corner of the mouth. Especially with hard baits, bass realize the lure isn't food and split the lure out before they turn and swim away. Then you also have to consider most bass are caught in areas with a ton of weeds. You can't rig a circle hook to be weedless
If you can’t find the fish without technology, you aren’t a fisherman.
Or u just gotta do things the olden way 😂jk
Decades ago Arkansas Game and Fish came to a local slough to do a fish count. I've been told by an old timer that before the AGFC did their fish count that the slough was a really good place to fish, needless to say after the fish count it became a place where catching a fish was rare. It still to this day hasn't recovered.
No population recovery after decades? Something else is wrong, if what you say is true.
My creds? Retired fishery biologist.
Makes me wonder why they did the count in the first place. Maybe a company was dumping in local waterways, or there was an introduction of some invasive species.
The launches by us have 100’s of trophy size bass floating after tournaments because they were bounced around in a livewell all day. Tournaments need to all be catch and immediate release if they want to see the lakes thrive and true trophy sizes become available.
watching this video. As a catch and release recreational fisherman, I try my hardest to ensure a survival.
That’s awesome. I’m kind of a converted salmon/steelhead guy and have found certain things we do to prevent wild fish kill also translate well to bass. I started pinching barbs (required in my state for salmon/steelhead) and started using hooks with a different gap to help keep fish hooked rather than barbs.
Another thing, which might sound stupid, is I avoid certain lures that fish tend to hit aggressively and swallow. Football jigs and Carolina rigs are examples.
What hooks do you use?
Circle hooks ensure a good lip hook!
@@WeAllLaughDownHere-ne2ou been switching to them since I learned that a couple years ago.
Thanks for doing this to illustrate the decline that I’ve experienced as well. I think theprocess of stuffing 4-5 trophy smallies in a box and all the stress that goes with that is too harmful for those old beasts. I think catch and release is the only hope we have. MLF does it right
The ned rig is the worst and I’ve caught so many “helmet head” small largemouth that have had their jaw reconstructed from a 5/0 flipping hook. the slack line hookset some of these guys throw with braid they dam near rip the head off of little guys. They feel a nibble and they load up for the strongest hook set they can. Requiring barbless hooks would somewhat help.
Thank you for this collaboration. Considering the compounded effect over time, bass would be highly concentrated at their release sites, potentially leading to their entire population being caught within a few years, especially if one-third were caught in just a single year.
Bass migrate back to where they were caught in a couple weeks, a conservation study proved this, only thing that slows them down is bait fish or crawfish
When everybody wises up and uses the layout we use in kayak tournaments, mortality will be NEAR ZERO PERCENT!!! We use Tourney X (as do several pro circuits like MLF) to record the gps location of the photo taken with the fish on a certified, official rule board, time and date of photo, and best of all, the photo MUST BE ACCEPTED by non-competitor judges who cerify the fish was measured correctly, that the identification number for the event is correct, and most importantly, that the fish appears 100% alive. They may even ask for extra photos if there is any question, so we take three or four of each fish, and release them IMMEDIATELY where they were caught! Not removed from their beds and hauled 80 miles down the lake in a small box with four other terrified bass, bumping and banging in the ride of their life, literally. Wise up people!!!!! We are beyond having to have weigh-ins! We should at LEAST consider only bringing our largest fish in, because TourneyX automatically tallies our 5 longest for the day.
Guess you missed that part of the study! Even catch and release is 22%
i believe he is forgoing the inherent stress deaths that happen with fishing that can be seen in catch and release. I think thats less of a factor in alot of cases than what he was saying with fish being stuffed in a livewell for inperson weigh ins, fish experience a lot more stress in that than just a quick picture and off into the water.@@charlesmoore9970
@@charlesmoore9970 Also, missed the part were was it 2 of the studies said that it was only causing a loss of 1% to 3% a year and was considered negligible. Where as the ones who catch and eat the limit would have a higher impact on the lakes fish. Especially when they go for a weekend with their family and relatives and 5+ kids and pull in limits for every person and kid they have each day they are there. And you see 20 other "families" doing the same thing that weekend. This weekend is any weekend you personally finally get time time to get to the lake, thus for them it is every weekend because they are always there doing this...
😅i😅o😅 I’m😊f
Alot of it is due to mishandling. In kayak tournaments the fish is released almost immediately.@charlesmoore9970
As a Texan I am happy our fisheries are so well managed. Great video! I wonder if you could follow up with a few additional stats taking into consideration the juvenile population of bass as well. While a 38% figure may sound high, it's hard to judge without at least an estimation of the TOTAL population of fish. Legal in this case would be a 14 inch plus fish. As long as the juvenile population can sustain fishing, there is hope in deed that my kids and grandkids will enjoy fishing for many years to come!
In any subject, always refreshing to hear someone actually referring to facts, statistics and studies, instead of just coming up with their own conclusions based on concepts in their head.
This is actually awesome! I love listening to studies like this.
Socal is already ruined. All of our major lakes are so highly pressured it's always a skunk fest. The bass won't hit anything artificial. They are smart. Also, the fish are gone! Certain groups or types of people keep and eat everything they catch, regardless of size or species.
Same in Georgia. Too many catch n cooks
The fish are not gone. Bass aren’t even native to socal lol. And I highly doubt they’ll be extirpated. If anything it’s good they’re not responding to lures. Like you’re complaining about not being able to do the same thing that you hate others doing. Does that not strike you as being incredibly selfish?
I have not been skunked in 8 years😂 I go fishing about once or twice a month at a bunch of lakes in Socal... You must just suck, I don't even use a live scope 💀
@@giantchasers no there clearly isn’t lmao. Georgia has a ridiculous amount of bass. You’re clearly just as much to blame for them being harder to catch than everyone else.
@@andrewdevlin8756 these Ga boys like to eat. Sucks
The scientific videos are my hands down favorite. I don't care if it is about fish populations, angler impact, bass phisiology, etc. They're all my favorite and, Tyler, you do a solid job presenting them.
Don't mistake this for science.
@@IndianaSmallmouth As far as RUclips bass fishing videos go, this is one of the most scientific. Reading studies is absolutely more scientific.
It's always good to have data from the fisheries biologist surveys. I had the opportunity to speak with a Wisconsin DNR person about 6 weeks ago. He let me know that the day prior catch of a trophy walleye was actually surveyed the previous year. It had a pec fin clipped. I had several pics on my phone and didn't notice that
Hey Brian, I’m not sure if you are aware or not but there is a website with the spring fisheries survey data from the Wisconsin DNR.
@@austinmannigel8611 I was not. Thanks Austin. I'll look into this for the lake we were on
Went fishing Saturday on Tennessee River. Couldn’t buy a fish on the bank or normal spots. Threw out IN the middle of the river and caught a 4.3 Smallmouth. Sometimes the fish ain’t where we are casting. They’re somewhere else I found out. Just saying 🤔😁
Thanks BFHQ for videos like this. This 62yr old OG has learned so much from this channel. Thanks for all you hard work. God bless
Great video. It takes time to fully dive into a paper and understand them as well as you do, and then to make a high quality video. Good job and thanks
Although this has nothing to do with my fisheries, I truly love watching informative videos like this. See im in Mexico, anglers out here would say its useless but to me all this information allows me to better understand my opponent and work as a team if that makes any sense 😅
The Snakehead fish and the Chinese Carp are killing our lakes!
Idiots releasing their "pets" when they get too big.
Your fault.
And zebra mussels.
@@smittyINChow do you figure?
Snakehead ended up in the lakes due to aquarium releases (same as introducing goldfish into the lakes).
The Asian carp were initially used to control pests in places where fish are farmed for commerical sales, and ended up in the wild.
So unless someone he has dumped their domestic fish into the wild waters, or contribute to farmed fish consumption, they are not at fault.
@@notthelake It was a joke. Over here in Florida, aquarium released fish is about the only kind of fish we catch 🎣.
As a pond owner, I was shocked by some of the statistics. This year, on a 4-5 acre pond(depends on rain amounts). I've taken out over 180 predators, mostly bass. I've been doing that for over 5 years & my relative weights have continued to go up. Im growing footballs now. Comparing my bass population to Sam Rayburns(my pond is about 90 miles away) is at least triple that of Rayburn's? That doesn't make sense to me? Maybe there is a study on that? Also we rotetononed a acre pond back in the 1970's. It brought back memories when you mentioned it. Thanks for the information.
Nice to see this video got posted! I've been waiting for another study video to happen, it brings light to important topics and addresses myths in fishing (Also first comment)
Thanks for posting this Tyler, it definitely makes me rethink my stance on Alum Creek being destroyed by all the fishing pressure.
One factor not considered is the loss of natural habitat due to overdevelopment on these lakes. Commercial and residential properties with trucked in sand, rocks or concrete blocks disturb the natural environment and can have huge impacts around spawning habits along the shorline. Weeding machines, agriculture, excess sediment and fertilizers also negatively impact the water columns that feed these bodies of water as well.
When I was younger, many of the small to medium size lakes throughout Wisconsin were minimally developed and you could fish from the bank almost anywhere you wanted. Now it's all developed with vacation homes, and if you don't have a boat your only option is the boat ramp.
That was very interesting and informative. Thank you for taking the time to educate us.👍
Unfortunately I think if you want bass to catch in the future it's going to take a lot more hatcheries and stocking. It doesn't seem like the population can stand up to the pressure. But the economy is dependent on the fish, and fish are important to the ecosystem. So the only solution I can think of is stocking fish.
I love your very, very informative videos Tyler. Bass studies, line strength studies, knot studies, etc. Keep up the great work!
Dude the quality of this video is fantastic!
I appreciate that. Spent a lot of time on it
I guess I am just old school. I was always taught never to kill an animal if you are not going to eat it (or for defence of course)
I'd rather 100% of the fish that are killed eaten than even only 10% of those caught dying for sport
agree
I'd like to see a video along these same lines but having to do with the chemical contamination of the bass in a given lake.
I ask because here in Arizona, some of our fisheries are so contaminated with mercury that our Arizona Game and Fish department has a dedicated webpage they call their, "Fish Consumption Advisory."
That page lists the bodies of water and the types of fish and the amounts of those fish that one should or shouldn't consume.
I'm sure Arizona isn't the only state with this kind of pollution in the water that affects the fish themselves, it also affects those who consume them.
Other states must have similar problems.
California delta does. Those consumption warning signs are on every pier and boat launch area
CT has warnings too for certain bodies of water. Some fisheries advise no consumption of the fish due to heavy metals
Yup New York has that for our major rivers and some lakes
its not just Arizona its the whole country
The mercury in many Arizona lakes are natural. The high concentration is caused by the total volume of water decreasing drastically. I would not call it "pollution" but it certainly is a human issue.
The lake I fish on is 20,000 acres and been fishing there for 4 years and only caught 1 small mouth bass 1.1lbs 😅
I take it just the opposite. 38% of all fish in the lake being caught over the course of the year seems huge.
That was my initial thought too. I feel like a third is way too high
38% of the entire population were caught in a fishery? That's an insanely high rate, I would have guessed something like 5-10% were caught over the course of a year.
Bass have bold/shy personalities that are passed down to generations. You’ll most likely never catch the shy fish and over time fish will become more shy/harder to catch.
Also 38% in ONE year is a ton
That is total crap. Fish don't have personalities - they have instincts that make them fish. Understanding those instincts will help you to catch them dummy.
This video really opened up my eyes. I usually never eat fish, it is my sport and escape from the world. I will def make small changes to help the sport live on forever.
Very interesting! Obviously every lake, habitat, species, populations are different. I'm sure the smaller the lake the harder it is on it. I've found a small lake that has some amazing largmouth in it, & it doesn't have a ton of pressure at all. It's full 4-8lb bass. I've caught a 8.6 a 9.3 & my current PB an 11.4 this summer. I've also seen a guy with a 13 lber which was the biggest largmouth I've ever seen in person. It fishes very tough though. Spend lots of days getting only a couple bites to getting skunked. But I finally think I started figuring out how to key in on the bigs there. They are big smart bass for sure, not easy to catch
You in Florida?
There is a simple solution. Require tournament organizers to restock the lakes to compensate for estimated losses.
It’s not that the foreigners ‘don’t know’, it’s that they don’t care. If they get in trouble, they aren’t worried ab the fish, they’re worried ab being caught as an illegal.
Back in the 60’s our family camped at Gardner Lake in Conn. I remember catching a lot of Yellow Perch, using the smaller perch for bass.
There’s a whole lot of bass being caught these days that were never recieving any pressure before, thanks to FFS!
Those numbers of bass caught by tournament anglers will now sky rocket with FFS (Forward Facing Sonar). I may be wrong but the more readily available this technology becomes the more it will effect fish populations that never ever see a lure. I also agree areas with weigh in stations do hold many of those fish let go for quite awhile and in my fishing experience a portion of those fish get caught afterwards by folks that keep them. Although this has cause some bass leagues to bring those fish back out into the lake away from the boat ramps where they are safer. Still as the saying goes their is plenty of fish in the sea/lake! Lol... You did your homework! Very interesting and eye opening video!! Fish on!!
EDIT: The error was corrected 😀
Is the grammatical error in the title intentional? Not being a jerk - just commenting early in case you wanted to correct it. If it's just to generate comments like the one I'm typing now, carry on I guess lol
No I am just an idiot
@@BassFishingHQ 😂 I would want people to inform me for my videos so I’m glad we caught it early!
@@nextlevelangling definitely. It’s not the first time. You’d think I would review stuff like that
Using non-clickbait headlines would make it easier not to make typos.
As far as the Connecticut study. We don’t have large lakes and even less big enough to hold tournaments. That said the lakes mentioned receive heavy fishing pressure all season long.
It’s all about the money like everything else in this country
That’s a awesome study. Well I know for a fact that a PFA ( public Fishing Area) have plenty of bass even with very heavy pressure, that there is plenty of fish in them because you can’t catch them! 😅. The people that run the PFAs over stock the fisheries with bait fish and the bass look at your lure and turn the other way😂.
In California there is a lot of poaching happening, and it's getting worse with the open borders.
bUt tHE ImMIGraNTs!!1!1!
Our Tuesday night league has about 30-40 boats every Tuesday night. They only use two lakes in the rotation. Both lakes have become terrible to fish. Both lakes use to be amazing bass lakes. I love to fish and love the Tuesday nighters but I worry we are killing the fish off. Both of these lakes are significantly smaller then the lakes in your video. Love your videos Tyler! Best on the internet! Thanks for your work!
2 lake rotation for a 30-40 boat weekly club? The hell lol
38% caught is a huge number.
That’s what I was thinking. That seems extremely high to me and will only increase.
I really appreciate your channel. Your platform fills a past due niche in the bass fishing conversation. You set yourself apart by bringing this information to anglers. The studies are great. It’s the most important topic in all of fishing. We need to understand the toll that 1 individual can dish out on the sustainability of our favorite sport. Forgive me for making anything political, but It’s okay to be conservative and pro environment at the same time. This isn’t a debate, it’s just a choice. Are you going to leave the hook in that fishes mouth? Are you gonna cut a snag after working on it for a minute? You gonna leave all that fishing line behind? Are you going to be pro active and pick up that fishing line that is bunched up in the weeds left by the bum who fished there yesterday? Or maybe even confront people that you see disrespect our sport, and tell them why you think it’s important to fish differently. It’s okay to let people know how fish should be handled. We all want these fish to thrive, and not hook them into extinction. I’m glad to see content like this!
First things first. Ban ffs and live scope, ppl using them target big bass out deep that were out there for a reason, and that’s gotta stop
Very interesting information. I appreciate you documenting this. Thanks
So, we have 2 of the studies say that tournament fishing and catch and release fishing was only causing a loss of 1% to 3% a year and was considered negligible. Where as the ones who catch and eat the limit would have a higher impact on the lakes fish. Especially when they go for a weekend with their family and relatives and 5+ kids and pull in limits for every person and kid they have there, each day they are there. And you see 20 other "families" doing the same thing that weekend. This seems to be almost every weekend fishing is possible.
Whi the hell keeps bass?
It's a lot of people where I live that eat them. It's also catch and release only where I live so unfortunately that speaks volumes.
A lot of people around the world and it's really annoying and makes me mad even tho I'm a trout angler and theirs no bass in my country
AnglingBuzz just had a great video on ice fishing for crappie. If you hook them at 40ft and pull them up, they have a very high mortality rate. Better to keep them for dinner and limit out, then catch and release 40 fish. At least in this one situation.
So much better than science-free Blaukat
Awesome video can't wait to see what else you have in store 👍
So wait, they shocked and stabbed 6031 bass, and we are the problem?
Yes, because shocking them with electricity is actually better for them than a hook. It doesn’t sound right but its true. And this data is important anyway.
I fish Sam Rayburn all the time. It’s my home lake. I can confidently say that the bass population is sustainable if not growing. Having fished tournaments that have the lake looking like a city i can also say that most of the bass we catch are keeper size! Very exciting stuff. More on Sam Rayburn please!
Makes no sense, some tournament anglers will pre fish and they catch the exact same fish that they prefished for none of those are dying . I would say the only thing killing fish is the boat slamming them around the livewell during runs. No kidding, fish are gonna die when theyre being sloshed around. Ever bought a pet fish from the store and it died the first night you got ir because you were rough with the waterbag going home in the car. Its like if someone took one of us humans, and put us inside a shaker machine that just grabs us and shakes us violently as hard as we can handle and then just expects us to be okay... Guts are being churned
Except they literally are dying. Just because fish have been caught multiple times doesn’t mean that’s wrong. You’re making the mistake of using personal anecdotes to try to argue against a scientific study. Nobody ever said every bass dies that is caught and retained. Just that some of them do. Also, is it really that hard for your brain to understand that stuffing a fish into a box with no ability to move and being hooked up to a clamp for 8 hours, only to be stuffed in a bag and held out of water for multiple minutes- can kill them? Like seriously? You gotta use your head and just accept the fact that you kill fish when you catch them sometimes, instead of denying even the possibility that it happens. You’re seriously gonna argue with a scientific study because you can’t bear to admit that you’ve killed fish?
I dont bed fish during the spawn..and i have seen immigrants spear fishing big largemouths!! In NC
38% of the bass population gets caught every year .. to me that means every bass in that lake will be caught in under 3 years. That seems like a big number to me, but as long as most of them don't die when released, it will just make fishing them that harder after every bass will feel the poke of a hook in a short time.
Just got back from Sam Rayburn a few days ago. This is an eye opening video! Thanks for the info and keep 'em coming Ty!
Nice job . . . excellent research and presentation. Videos like these set your channel above others. Keep up the good work!
Where I fish in Lake Michigan I am convinced that a significant percentage game fish of various types are born and die naturally without seeing a lure or bait (mainly talking smallmouth, northern pike, walleye, and lake trout). Since the decline of gill netting that threat has diminished, too-that was seriously destructive and remains so for, say Pacific steelhead and salmon. For example, nobody used to fish for smallmouth. Now they are under intense pressure. Where I fish, certain types of smallmouth with shallow water habits have come under noticeable pressure that definitely affected their numbers and behavior. Lake Michigan is very clear so fisherman can sight fish for these shallow water smallmouth. But meanwhile, smallmouth who mainly suspend and follow deep water gobies or alewives or other baitfish (or only feed at night) can do that without seeing a lure. Smallmouth have also been known to spawn in deeper water on reefs that elude visual bed fishermen. In my view, it is the pressure on particularly easy game fish that I think you are seeing. In smaller rivers or lakes fisherman can definitely “fish them out” or significantly affect fishing, often driving the game fish to feed at night, another habit that avoids pressure. But in larger lakes and rivers the fish have a lot of choices and can avoid fishing pressure and still thrive. It’s just harder to find them-and harder for fisheries biologists to find them too. These are just my theories as I’ve spend a lot of time pursuing these “other” fish groups and I think we have a lot to learn about them. Pro fishermen tend to be on the leading edge and have proven that many fish even in very hard-fished lakes and river systems were simply never pressured by local fishermen. But they found them, mostly in so-called “offshore” areas. Do you realize how many offshore areas exist in a body of water like Lake Michigan? Too many to fish. Modern electronics are allowing some of us to find these fish with open water feeding habits and catch them. But in my view they are much harder to catch and find, and should do fine as long as forage remains adequate and relatively safe spawning habitat can be found. Again, just my two cents. 😊
I grew up on a small pond and fished small fisheries my whole life, pay attention during bed season, you will almost always see the same fish on the same spot year for year. Some fish will die from catch stress but I’ve only seen it after a drawn out fight where the fish swallowed the hook, and even then I’ve caught bass poopin out old jerry rigs which were removed properly and disposed into my panfish bag
You can certainly do better than 22% survival rate for catch and release further north, anywhere honestly but warmer water is rough on them.
I think it was 22% mortality rate.
A big problem is that many anglers use too light of line especially those who use monofilament and when that big one bites they break off and that fish has a high mortality rate. This takes a lot of trophy type bass right out the fishery.
From the videos i see on youtube you guys got it good. Veeeery good, you still have places to go and actually catch fish. In my country there is no control and people are either ignorant or dont care and just keep everything no matter the size "it will fill up the pan". However most of the damage is done by the "professionals" using dragging nets and they as well dont care about the laws, they have destroyed the Mediterranean they even use nets in lakes even though its illegal. And also the trash people leave behind... you have no idea. Hope you guys keep respecting your waters so you can keep fishing in them. tight lines.
Good Video. Have got an issue with the categories particularly the Recreational and Catch and Release. There are many recreational fishermen who catch and release, particularly trout/salmon/steelhead fly fishermen. So to lump them into a 100% kill recreational category is inaccurate at best. Would highly recommend having a specific category of “Subsistence” fishermen as 100% kill.
Awesome video. I appreciate you doing the homework for us.
In the south you should also consider that the higher temperatures likely add to stress. Warmer water has less disolved oxygen typically and that will add to the stress. On top of that pollution in lakes plays a role as well in terms of stress. (I'm a fresh water ecologist and tournament angler for catfish)
I thought the biggest fear was fishing being outlawed by governments who bend the knee to animal worshippers.... but what do I know....
During 2020 when all boat landings were shut down it was some of the most insane bass fishing I’ve ever taken part of on the 40k acre lake I live on.
Interesting study ..great information.
Fishing is a great hobby and is relaxing for our mind and body..
With more people fishing all over the world..off course there are major impacts..studies let’s us know of the pressures we are creating .
As important as this information is. I think there are some other things to consider as well. I can't speak for these lakes, but the lakes in my area deal with somethings that I'm sure also effect the numbers. One of the largest is flood control lakes and lake turn over. We had a major one here on a lake that's minutes from my home. There was barely an inch of bank that didn't have dead fish of all species on it. We also have lakes that aren't very deep and are sprayed every so often to kill grass off for a lot of reasons. That is forge and hiding habitat for a lot of species which BASS need for growth and survival. Some BASS may die shortly after being caught or release due to being weak from mal nourishment. The old, final nail in the coffin if you will. Another consideration is lake stocking. BASS aren't always at the top of the food chain and some species that are added will eat BASS and BASS are cannibals' and will eat each other as well. I think BASS death and survival is more connected to the body of water versus specific human intervention. We have lakes around here that get a lot of pressure and still produce very good BASS fishing. While others get a lot of attention, regular stocking, even very water specific slot limits. Yet despite that has some of the worst BASS fishing despite stricter harvest rules and less pressure.
I think a major factor in mortality rates in tournament fiahing is releasing them away from where they were caught. They may have been local to that particular area or obviously there foraging on prey. You release them into an area where there are already local bass and prey in the area is limited and already “spoken for”. You add in the factors of being hooked deep and being kept in a livewell all day and mishandling of the fish. All factors in. Im mot against tournament fishing whatsoever. But w the rise in angling on any level along w advancements in technology, we need to adjust w these changes w conservation in mind. And that’s where the trye debate begins. Personally, id argue an immediate catch and release system for tournaments would go a long way. Logistics are the hurdle there. But it’s not impossible
I always wonder why tournament anglers bring the fish back for weigh-ins. Why can’t they just have a marshal on board, weigh the fish when they are caught and then release them. Seems like that would be a lot less shock for the fish.
Yeah, but then they couldn't get that COOOOOL pic with their whole bag and that bigass 6 foot check!
Seriously though...I've wondered the same thing. I guess they figure the marshal would ruin the broadcast content and marketing pics if they had to shoot around him...or her.
Honestly, it makes a lot of sense to have a tournament offical on board. I get that it's probably a pain for the guys fishing, but it's a competition. Having a ref to enforce rules and certify/register catches immediately seems like a reasonable measure to keep competitions fair.
@@notreallymyname3736exactly!!! And it’s less stress on the fish.
@@ShafikKassam exactly! Better yet: make a separate "official's bracket" in the tourney will token prizes (I don't know, $300 +name on a plaque, give the tournament competitors a "best guide award" for the biggest ref caught fish). Have the actual competitors validate the officials' catches so they aren't just sitting there bored stiff. They could rotate officials once a day so they can't collude with any team. I'd imagine that there would be a lot more willing volunteers, and you wouldn't have a repeat of the Lake Erie sinker scandal.
Sounds like harvesting within proper regulations is the best option I’m gonna start bringing my cooler with me to spots
Something to be added to the "tournament angler" is that they have culled to retain only the largest and those are the ones at the highest risk. The guy that is going to eat the fish, keeps all but is not focused on a high weight to compete with peers and the chances of that dinner table fisherman going all over an entire lake to grab the biggest is pretty slim. I am in the 100% catch and release category.
It should be illegal to harvest bass and should be illegal to harvest over like 2 or 3 of any other fish unless there is an overpopulation
I enjoy your videos on Bass and Bass studies. Thanks for sharing
Good video👍...those 30 -40% catch rates are much higher than I expected and it's a significant amount. The problem where I live where lakes can be 30 acres to several hundred acres is poaching and illegal harvest..many good lakes have been diminished because of it.
I grew up on Rayburn and that lake just keeps fishing better year after year hopefully this low spell it’s having will refresh the lake and give it another “boom” like it did back in 2011 I think that was the really low year
As a environmental and marine scientist, and also a keen angler, this is all very interesting to me! Great video, thank you.
Can someone please send this to Randy Blackett he keeps thinking the sky is falling.
It should be mentioned that a lot of amateur fishing began during Covid. I’m sure the watch rates of your videos reflect this too. I have noticed in most small lakes and ponds in my area, after the first year of Covid, almost all of the big bass were gone. Which is crazy, bc everyone was texting their photos with them around just the spring prior. I know from some of the videos of catching these bass that they were mishandled, and that they were kept out of the water for inappropriate periods for people who just can’t live without getting a freakin photo. It’s not as noticeable in places that have always had high pressure, but it’s incredibly noticeable in very small bodies of water. And yea I know this is anecdotal, but it’s the reason I personally have almost entirely stopped taking photographs with my catches. I give myself 10 seconds to get all fish back into the water, so unless the hook just pops right out, I don’t have time, in order to follow my own rules. It’s also the reason I never use treble hooks anymore. So what if it makes catching more challenging? I’m up for it.
This study has reveals that our biggest fishing fear is you have a skill issue at catching the big momma's.
As a St. Clair native, I've never seen fish in as rough of shape as this year. All those sores you see are mostly from banging around livewells all day.
Great informative video. Thanks for this great information.
Fascinating video!!Very well done man!!
can you post the links to the studies you found? I would like to read and as a data guy, would be interested in the numbers.
I will do that in about 2 minutes. Check the description
@@BassFishingHQ thank you
This was extremely intriguing my only question would be I’d like an updated study after livescope has some time
Good work. Education and knowledge is the key to everything!
Great video. Was there an estimated die off on Sam Rayburn from tournament anglers and catch and release anglers? I guess if you use the same rate as the northern lakes 400,500 x 32% x 3% = 3,844 which is very small especially compared to harvesting.