Lakes, reservoirs, rivers, and coastal oceans are buffeted by many forces, including heat waves, intense storms, deep droughts, pollutants, exotic invasive species, and growing human demands for water, food, and places to live. In this turbulent environment, recreational fishing has emerged as a dominant force shaping fish stocks, food webs, and water quality. Understanding Recreational Fishers builds on the premise that we must comprehend fishers, fish, and their social–ecological context to build resilience of aquatic resources. Edited by a who’s who of international experts, the 25 multi-authored chapters draw from a range of social and ecological sciences to develop the breadth of questions and approaches relevant to recreational fisheries. The volume’s strength lies in its refusal to view fisheries through a single lens. It successfully integrates three pillars of fisheries science. Ecological perspectives acknowledge the powerful selective pressures and ecosystem-level impacts of recreational angling, recognizing that fishers are apex predators within aquatic ecosystems. Economic factors are broader than commercial yields and include nonmarket values and diverse utility metrics that affect angler behavior. Behavioral factors emerge from psychological and sociological perspectives of why fishers do what they do. They include factors, such as connections among family and friends, place attachment, and the diversity of motivations, that make recreational choices challenging to model and measure. Challenges of governance for recreational fisheries thread through the book. Editors argue that “command and control” regulation is insufficient for the complexity of modern angling. Instead, they prefer knowledge co-production by involving anglers in gathering data and organizing insights to build trust and collaboration among managers and anglers. The inherent unpredictability of human behavior and climate-driven ecological shifts require a flexible approach. The volume positions adaptive management as a necessary cycle of acting, observing, modeling, and learning. By treating management actions as experiments, the authors demonstrate how iterative learning cycles can help managers pivot in response to shifting angler preferences, technology, abrupt losses of recruitment, or climate shifts. This theme is demonstrated through the discussion of participatory modeling. The book shows that bringing fishers into the modeling process—allowing them to visualize the potential outcomes of different regulatory scenarios—leads to higher compliance and more robust management outcomes. It transforms stakeholders from passive recipients of rules into active architects of sustainability. For fisheries professionals, this book is an essential reference. The coverage of topics is deep, detailed, and based on current literature. The book offers analytical frameworks and case studies that are immediately applicable to research and policy design. Jerry Vaske and coauthors, for example, provide concise guidelines for writing and constructing surveys of recreational fishers. The inclusion of Brett van Poorten’s work on social–ecological feedbacks and Robert Arlinghaus’s insights into the “human dimension” ensures the content is grounded in cutting-edge research. The editors provide a rich synthesis in a final chapter on “Best Practices.” In their hands, the book’s multidisciplinary insights become a roadmap for applied research and management. The editors emphasize that understanding fishers requires a standardized approach to data collection, primarily through refined social science methodologies that are adapted for the broader social–ecological context. Key recommendations include the adoption of transdisciplinary tools to bridge the gaps among managers, scientists, and stakeholders, and ensure that human-dimension data and biological metrics are rigorous and integrated. By outlining the lifecycle of a research project—from design to evaluation—the authors provide a strategic framework for practitioners to account for fisher heterogeneity and behavioral feedbacks, and to foster more resilient and socially acceptable fisheries governance. The prose is dense and scholarly, as is appropriate for a volume that represents current research spanning several academic disciplines. The editors have managed to maintain a cohesive voice across chapters, ensuring that the transition from bio-economic modeling to social psychology feels seamless rather than disjointed. The open-access PDF provided online is a boon for students and teachers. I bookmarked dozens of passages for future rereading. Readers who like to think about fishing as integrated systems of people and nature will find much to enjoy in this volume. Understanding Recreational Fishers builds a new discipline from scattered ideas that popped up across the academic landscape during recent decades. The book provides the intellectual toolkit necessary to envision recreational fisheries as the complex, coupled social–ecological systems they truly are. It will enrich the library of fisheries scientists, researchers fascinated by social–ecological systems, or managers and policymakers tasked with balancing the scales of conservation and recreation.
Stephen R. Carpenter (Thu,) studied this question.