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Aquatic
Resource Restoration
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Aquatic Resource Enhancement Priority Funding List for 1999By HERB ALLENToday, many veteran bassers are saying fishing is better now than even during the "good old days." Many remember a time, beginning in the 1940s, when anglers from throughout the United States and several foreign countries trekked to the Sunshine State to realize a lifelong ambition to capture a sorcerous 10-pound largemouth. Bass seekers started to notice a spiraling downward trend in the size of their catches in the mid- to late-1980s, culminating early in this decade when the average size of the largest fish being weighed-in during tournament competitions dipped to an all-time low of 3.99 pounds. Recognizing that a need for drastic action was at hand, Florida's Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission (FWC) promptly embarked upon several initiatives to reverse this trend by lowering the daily bag limit from 10 to five fish, creating a minimum size limit of 12 or 14 inches (depending on location in the state), prescribing slot limits at many lakes, and countenancing a growing catch-and-release ethic among anglers. None of these measures were as meaningful, however, as FWC's continuing and gargantuan program of lake restorations which, among other things, include drawdowns, sediment and muck removal, shoreline restructuring, tussock and cattail purges, revegetation and/or enhancement of native plant communities, and the creation of "Habitat Islands" within lakes to create added fishery and wildlife sites while, at the same time, substantially lowering transport costs of sediment, muck, tussock and cattail removal during lake drawdowns. It's interesting to note that in just six years, from 1992 through 1998, anglers are catching more and bigger bass, and the average size of the fish winning a tournament's big bass pot has risen from less than four pounds to a decade high of more than 7-1/2 pounds. At the present rate of annual size increases, some are predicting this average will reach 8 pounds plus by the year 2001. With continued cooperation from the Florida Legislature and other agencies including water management districts, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, the Department of Transportation, the Department of Environmental Protection, active fishing clubs throughout the state, and various local city and county commissions, FWC will continue on its ambitious course of creating the world's best bass fishery to 2010 and beyond. For the remainder of this year and into next, here's but a partial listing of lake and fisheries augmentation projects on the Commission's Aquatic Resource Enhancement docket that are either underway or slated to begin soon:
Despite a gargantuan population explosion and the associated problems incurred as a result, FWC will continue to strive for a quality angler-friendly environment through its lakes and rivers restoration and enhancement initiatives. Now that the Sunshine State has regained its "Bass Capital of the World" chaplet, Florida's Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission is determined that it not be lost again.
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