Volunteer Angler Diary Program
Posted: Thu May 10, 2007 6:12 pm
WDFW Warmwater Fisheries has a program that collects fishing data from anglers. They send you a little book with blank pages in it, in which you record information. The data they're seeking consists of:
The date you fished.
The name of the lake where you fished.
The species you fished for.
How many hours you fished.
The length of each fish caught, and whether you released it.
Comments (optional).
WDFW has only a couple hundred people participating right now, and only a couple of muskie fishermen. Their data on tiger muskies, in particular, is sparse and they really need more muskie angler volunteers in order to build a representative data base. For the last couple years, a large part of their tiger musky data has come from me, and I've concentrated my efforts on only one of the seven tiger muskie lakes during that period.
If you volunteer, they will send you a small looseleaf book with blank pages which you can keep in your tackle box or a boat storage locker. I write down the information about each fish I catch right after releasing it. Under the "comments" section, I note the weather conditions and surface water temperature.
It's a little bit of work, but not overly onerous, and providing these data to the fisheries managers will help them make more accurate assessments of how productive our muskie fishery is and possibly suggest ways to manage it better, which helps us as anglers. So, I'm posting this comment to encourage more of you to participate in this worthy program.
http://wdfw.wa.gov/fish/warmwater/volunteer.htm
The date you fished.
The name of the lake where you fished.
The species you fished for.
How many hours you fished.
The length of each fish caught, and whether you released it.
Comments (optional).
WDFW has only a couple hundred people participating right now, and only a couple of muskie fishermen. Their data on tiger muskies, in particular, is sparse and they really need more muskie angler volunteers in order to build a representative data base. For the last couple years, a large part of their tiger musky data has come from me, and I've concentrated my efforts on only one of the seven tiger muskie lakes during that period.
If you volunteer, they will send you a small looseleaf book with blank pages which you can keep in your tackle box or a boat storage locker. I write down the information about each fish I catch right after releasing it. Under the "comments" section, I note the weather conditions and surface water temperature.
It's a little bit of work, but not overly onerous, and providing these data to the fisheries managers will help them make more accurate assessments of how productive our muskie fishery is and possibly suggest ways to manage it better, which helps us as anglers. So, I'm posting this comment to encourage more of you to participate in this worthy program.
http://wdfw.wa.gov/fish/warmwater/volunteer.htm