Welcome to the Scottish
Freshwater Fishery Management home page. This is a new site which
describes how Scotland’s salmon and freshwater fisheries are managed and
which organisations are involved. This site contains all the common
information about fishery management in Scotland. Please use the
navigation bar to the right to find out more about the organisations
involved – theDistrict Salmon Fishery Boards and their
representative body –ASFB, and the River &Fishery
Trusts and their representative body –RAFTS.
Scotland has a unique system
of managing its salmon and freshwater fisheries. All river catchments
have their own characteristics, diversity of species and range of
fisheries, and as such, fishery management has been delivered on a
river-by-river principle for at least the last 150 years. Historically,
salmon fisheries have been of greatest economic importance, and this is
reflected in the amount of legislation which has been devoted to salmon
since the mid 19th Century to the present day. However, Scotland’s
diversity of species has also increased since then, and in more recent
years, there has been greater interest in the development of fisheries
for other species, such as the wide range of coarse fish and rainbow
trout. Unlike England and Wales, Scotland has no rod licensing system.
All fishing rights (with one or two exceptions), are private rights,
with varying degrees of legal protection.
In terms of fishery
management bodies, the system in Scotland, on the face of it, is
relatively simple. Scotland has 54 salmon fishery districts which are
set out in legislation. District Salmon Fishery Boards (DSFBs) exist for
most of these districts, and these have legal powers and duties relating
to the management and conservation of salmon and sea trout. As there is
no public rod licence to raise funds for managing the fisheries, each
DSFB has legal powers to raise a levy from the individual salmon fishery
owners on each river system to enable management and conservation to be
carried out. The Association of Salmon Fishery Boards (ASFB) represents
all DSFBs in Scotland and more information on the DSFB structure can be
found on the ASFBs web site at:
http://asfb.hub.uk.com/default.asp
Getting the correct
information on the status of fish populations in order to make good
fishery management decisions is a perennial problem for fishery
managers. The DSFBs are limited in their role to managing salmon and sea
trout only. The increasing importance of other species to Scotland’s
aquatic diversity, economy and social value and their ability to support
new fisheries is of growing interest. No formal management structures
exist for these species. The emergence of the Fishery Trusts since the
mid 1990s have gone a considerable way to addressing this gap in
knowledge about species other than salmon and sea trout. The Trusts also
play a key role in providing information to DSFBs to promote, sound,
science based management. The network of Trusts continue to expand and
evolve and many have developed sophisticated systems for monitoring
freshwater fish populations and providing good advice to fishery
managers to enable decisions to be based on best available information –
this is the crux of good fishery management. There are currently18
fishery trusts and like the ASFB, these are represented through a single
national representative body called Rivers and Fishery Trusts Scotland
(RAFTS).
More information on the
Trust network and RAFTS can be found at:
http://rafts.hub.uk.com/
Both ASFB and RAFTS, as the
representative national bodies for DSFBs and Trusts, have developed a
close working relationship, and are closely meshed at Executive level
within each organisation. Equally important is the need for the member
DSFBs and Trusts within the local network to work hand-in-hand – this is
currently being developed as part of a drive for better co-ordination
within the freshwater fishery management sector in Scotland. It is worth
noting that DSFBs and Trusts are constitutionally different – DSFBs are
statutory organisations whereas Trusts are set up as charitable
organisations – however, both have to observe certain legal provisions
set out in statute.
In order to achieve better
co-ordination, both organisations are developing a joint Guide to Best
Practice, have now embarked on a joint Tri-annual Newsletter and of
course we are developing this joint website.
A further national
initiative is underway which is probably the single most important and
influential catalyst for change which Scotland’s freshwater fisheries
have faced since the fishery boards were created in the Mid 1800s.
The Scottish Freshwater
Fisheries Forum is a national partnership initiative between the
Scottish Executive and the private sector fishery management and angling
interests. The Forum, through its Steering Group, has played a pivotal
role in shaping the Aquaculture & Fisheries Bill which is currently
before Parliament. The Forum has two further key challenges before it
which will shape the future of freshwater fisheries in Scotland.
The first is the development
of a Strategic Framework for Freshwater Fisheries. This will identify
all the stakeholders involved within the freshwater fisheries sector and
create a co-ordinated plan of action to deliver sustainable and
economically viable fisheries in the medium to long term.
The second challenge, and
which falls within this framework, is to address the long standing gaps
which exist in the current management system which fail to manage
species other than salmon and sea trout. Addressing this will be a
complex task requiring considerable thought and input from all involved
in freshwater fisheries – anglers, conservationists and fishery managers
alike. A considerable amount of information is available on the detailed
discussions of the Forum to date.
If you are interested in
these future issues for fisheries in Scotland, please take the time to
look at the Forum web pages at
www.scotland.gov.uk/Topics/Fisheries/Salmon-Trout-Coarse/FFF/Intro