Recreational anglers harvest roughly 4,200 tons of fish each year from inland lakes, according to the study by Holly Embke, a graduate student with the university's Center for Limnology.
"There's a lot of fish people are pulling out of these lakes. That's not necessarily super surprising," Embke said. "People love to fish; they love to eat fish. The magnitude is surprising."
To come up with her estimate, Embke and colleagues at the U.S. Geological Survey took fish harvest estimates from the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources and scaled them to the state level.
They did some additional calculations to estimate the edible portion of the fish, which works out to about 2.5 pounds per fishing license, almost as much freshwater fish as the average American buys at the grocery store.
Embke said there's a lot of global interest in identifying where people get their food and protecting those food sources, but recreational fisheries have been largely unmeasured and underrepresented.
"Recreational fisheries do play a role in food security," she said.
Embke is now working to develop estimates of recreational fish consumption at the national level and hopes her research can guide the management of these freshwater resources.
Maria Powell, executive director of the Midwest Environmental Justice Organization, said the study also underscores the need to protect public waters, many of which are contaminated with PCBs, mercury and PFAS compounds that build up in fish.
"The toxic chemicals in our waters and fish create difficult unfortunate tradeoffs," Powell said. "Fishing is a healthy outdoor activity and fish is nutritious food. But because of the contaminants, anglers must weigh the benefits of eating fish with the risks of ingesting toxic chemicals and feeding them to their families."
Embke said her findings, published in the journal Fisheries, also reveal a value that doesn't show up in the $2.3 billion annual economic impact of recreational fishing: if anglers bought all that fish from grocery stores, it would cost roughly $65 million.
The study is based on 28 years of DNR creel surveys, named for the wicker baskets traditionally used to carry fish. Each year clerks on 267 lakes across the state interview anglers about what they're fishing for and what they caught, as well as what type of gear they're using and how long they've been out.
The study found that overall harvest numbers have remained steady even as the number of fishing licenses declined. The numbers also show changes in the fish people are taking home.
Walleye, the iconic staple of Friday fish fries, accounted for a quarter of the harvest in 1990. By 2017, it was just 9% as anglers brought home more black crappie and bass.
Embke said this "harvest switching" reflects the declining walleye population. While skilled anglers are still catching walleye, others are catching what's available.
There are limits to the data.
For one, creel studies are only done on lakes, which tend to have fewer entry points than streams and rivers. The surveys also tend to focus on northern Wisconsin lakes, though Embke developed a statistical model to extrapolate the data for southern lakes.
"This is only covering a subset of recreational fisheries harvest," Embke said.
More importantly, they don't include unlicensed anglers or Native American spear fishers, suggesting the actual harvest is much larger.
Powell said people of color and subsistence anglers — who fish primarily to put food on the table — are traditionally underrepresented in the data.
"This race and class blindness in scientific fish consumption studies — essentially a type of institutional racism — creates significant risk assessment problems," Powell said.
If people are eating more fish, the risks from chemical contamination is even greater. And while there is little data on subsistence fishing in Wisconsin, Powell said her research suggests they're eating more fish than recreational anglers.
"I would guess that on average they eat much more than 2.5 pounds a year," Powell said. "Far more."
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