The joint statement put out recently by the Angling Trust, Natural
England and the Environment Agency was the product of the first of many
meetings about otters and fisheries. It was based on the information
available at the meeting. Since then, anglers have contacted us
reporting problems on other waters.
The Trust has been set up
to represent the views of all anglers, based on good quality
information, and we have therefore produced a questionnaire for anglers
to let us know what is going on in the rivers and stillwaters they know
best. [click here for more details]
We need to understand more about what and where the problems are before we can find, and fight for solutions.
Funding for Fencing
On stillwaters, small clubs and fisheries cannot afford to install
fencing to keep otters out. The Angling Trust is working with the
Environment Agency to identify funds which could help these small
businesses protect their fish. We will be issuing detailed guidance on
how to apply for funding, fence design and recommended contractors to
all our member clubs and fisheries so that they can take action.
On rivers, potential solutions are more complex. Fencing is not an
option. Calling for a cull of otters would be political suicide and
would create an army of enemies of angling. Anyway, the law does not
allow any interference with otters or their habitat. Otters are here to
stay. On a number of rivers, otters co-exist with excellent fisheries.
We therefore need to address the factors which make otter predation a
problem for anglers.
In rivers which are affected by low flows, pollution and habitat
damage, fish populations cannot withstand an effective predator such as
the otter. The return of otters to unnatural and unhealthy fisheries is
disastrous, because the fishery is not generating replacements for
their prey.
Potential for Restocking
A temporary solution is re-stocking, and the EA has offered to help
with this, but we demand rapid action on rivers which are polluted and
over-abstracted. We will fight for widespread restoration of spawning
and nursery habitats and cover. Low flows make predation much easier.
Pollution kills and prevents the creation of tens of millions of fish
each year. Dredged and canalised rivers have no spawning or nursery
habitat, or hiding places for fish. Cormorants are decimating whole
year classes of future specimen fish.
All these battles we can and will fight ferociously, and with the
support of enough anglers we will win. It would be madness however to
fight battles we are sure to lose and which could destroy angling.
To participate in the questionnaire please click here
Click here to see our 270+ page Carp Fishing e-book