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Comments sought on new recreational fishing survey
A
proposed new recreational fishing survey could soon expand into North
Carolina and may serve as a prototype for fishing data collection
nationwide.
If approved, the project will be conducted in partnership between NOAA
Fisheries and the N.C. Division of Marine Fisheries. It will use
contact information from the state’s new Coastal Recreational
Fishing License to develop improved recreational data collection
methods.
NOAA is seeking public comments on the proposed pilot project through
Nov. 13, and DMF plans to begin its first phone surveys under the
program in late December and early January.
“This is a great program that satisfies the primary objective of
the division in pursuing the Coastal Recreational Fishing License,
which was better information on the recreational fishery in North
Carolina,” said DMF Director Louis Daniel.
Currently, the federal government and the state collect recreational
fishing data through the Marine Recreational Fisheries Statistics
Survey, a program that will be phased out during the next several
years. This program uses random phone surveys of coastal households to
estimate saltwater recreational catches. But this is a less effective
means of gathering information because usually only a small percentage
of those called actually fished during the survey period.
Recent changes in federal law require the federal government to conduct
future surveys by targeting anglers through licensing or registration
programs. The pilot project is part of a new Marine Recreational
Information Program being designed by NOAA to meet this requirement.
The pilot project will test the assumption that replacing the existing
random phone survey of coastal residents with a survey of only those
people who purchased a saltwater fishing license will improve
efficiency and lead to a more accurate accounting of angler fishing
habits.
A similar project is already being tested in states bordering the Gulf
of Mexico. The inclusion of North Carolina in the program will help
NOAA fine-tune its survey methods.
Comments on the pilot project may be sent to dHynek@doc.gov through Nov. 13.
For more information about the pilot program, e-mail Rob.Andrews@noaa.gov or visit http://www.st.nmfs.noaa.gov/mrii/index.html.
For questions regarding North Carolina’s role in the program,
contact Doug Mumford at (800) 338-7804 or (252) 948-3876 or by e-mail
at doug.mumford@ncmail.net.
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