I saw some people fishing the other day in 16 degree Fahrenheit (-9 Celsius) weather at 4:30AM. They were not ice fishing with a little hut, but standing at the base of a bridge with no shelter or campfire. People are at that bridge fishing regularly when it is cold but that was the coldest temp I have seen so far. Why is it so appealing to them?

  • Tedrow
    link
    fedilink
    3
    edit-2
    9 months ago

    People don’t realize it but most fish that are thrown back die from their injuries.

    • @glimse@lemmy.world
      link
      fedilink
      99 months ago

      I can’t find any sources to back up that claim, do you? The highest estimate I found was from Wikipedia

      A metastudy in 2005 found that the average catch and release mortality rate was 18%, but varied greatly by species.[17] During an Oklahoma Department of Wildlife Conservation study, up to 43 percent of fish released after being caught died within six days as a result of inadequate holding and weigh in procedures during tournaments.[18] More recent studies reported in Montana estimate that approximately 20% of released trout die from injuries or stress and for those that do not die, their injuries may significantly reduce their ability to feed and grow.[19]

    • @dumbcrumb@lemmy.world
      link
      fedilink
      English
      69 months ago

      This varies wildly depending on what species and how it was caught. Fish with really thin lips like largemouth are generally perfectly fine after being released.