Persistent, innate challenges and opportunities for capacity building in Canadian freshwater fisheries – Andrew Howarth

Persistent, innate challenges and opportunities for capacity building in Canadian freshwater fisheries – Andrew Howarth

Author: Andrew Howarth

Freshwater fisheries and biodiversity have substantial economic, socio-cultural, and ecological value, but face a growing list of anthropogenic threats which, in many cases, are intensifying. Canada’s freshwater fisheries are not exempt from this, and provide excellent opportunities to better understand these overlooked and undervalued systems. Prior to some foundational reports in the late 20th century, little attention was paid to policies, health, or governance in Canada’s freshwater fisheries. In recent decades, there has been relatively little research on the above-mentioned policies and governance, despite declines in said fisheries and freshwater biodiversity worldwide. Using expert and chain-referral sampling, we surveyed practitioners from across Canada about the management and administration of freshwater fisheries. Using a mixed methods (i.e., questionnaire, interview) approach, we identified and described in detail many important aspects of the above processes. We highlight and discuss ten persistent and innate challenges (descending from most frequently discussed) in (1) bureaucratic sprawl, (2) lack of priority, (3) scope, (4) competing interests, (5) political inconstancy, (6) socio-ecological complexity, (7) limited tools, (8) geographies and scale, (9) reactivity, and (10) intersectoral frictions. For many reasons, these challenges defy conventional problem solving (e.g., advocacy, basic science). We also identify and describe two key phenomena in chronic incapacity and triage management, which explain the current position and perils of freshwater fisheries in Canada and beyond. Using these insights, we provide recommendations for capacity building in Canada’s freshwater fisheries, paying special attention to the non-negotiable and negotiable elements of these systems.

With increasing threats to the aquatic environment, it is essential that we also evolve our technologies to identify issues and potential solutions quickly.

Lester Anoquot & Greg NadjiwonChiefs, Chippewas of Saugeen First Nation

[S]tands out as one of the most exciting and integrated proposals I have read for some time.

Ontario GenomicsReview Panel

One of the first Academic proposals I have seen in a while that could provide really clear benefits for the management of fish in BC

A. ClarkeFreshwater Fisheries Society of BC