DOI: 10.1002/nafm.11053 ISSN: 0275-5947

How do ice anglers and their fishing behaviors differ from non‐ice anglers? Insights drawn from a large‐scale survey of anglers from Ontario, Canada

Len M. Hunt

Abstract

Objective

The research goal was to understand who are ice and non‐ice (i.e., open water only) fishers and how do they fish (e.g., target species choice and travel distance to fishing sites). To achieve this goal, hypotheses were developed and tested that ice fishing participation and fishing behaviors would be influenced by (1) the availability of quality ice fishing opportunities, (2) the commitment level of the angler to fishing, and (3) the urban or rural location of residence and gender identity of an angler.

Methods

Differences between ice and non‐ice fishers from Ontario, Canada, were assessed using inferential statistics and general linear models and cross tabulations from responses to a large‐scale survey of resident Ontario anglers in 2020.

Result

Ice fishing participation rates were higher among fishers who resided in areas with longer (better quality) ice fishing seasons; showed increased commitment to fishing by purchasing more expensive fishing licenses and fishing more days during the open‐water season; and were rural residents, males, and younger individuals. When compared to open water, ice fishing activity was more spatially constrained and heavily targeted towards fish species that prefer cool‐ or coldwater habitats. Even among ice fishers, these individuals targeted cool‐ and coldwater fish species at higher rates during the ice than open‐water fishing seasons.

Conclusion

Ice fishers differ from non‐ice fishers in who they are (more likely to be male, rural, and younger), how they connect to fishing (more likely to be committed to fishing), and how they fish (more likely to target cool‐ and coldwater species). These differences suggest that some water bodies (e.g., those near angling populations that hold coldwater fish species) may be at a greater risk from being overexploited during the ice than open‐water season.

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