Abstract

BackgroundDocumenting local ecological knowledge (LEK) has recently become a topic of considerable interest. LEK can contribute to various areas of ecology, including habitat management and conservation biology. It has been recently revealed that recreational fishers’ ecological knowledge (FEK) can also provide valuable information about different organisms and habitats, while recreational fishers’ ecological knowledge is understudied in many aspects and regions of the world.MethodsWe aimed to record Hungarian recreational FEK on plant species related to freshwater habitats. Our research was conducted in three regularly fished water bodies in Hungary, namely Lake Velence, Keleti Main Canal, and Lake Látóképi, where a total of 72 interviews were conducted with recreational anglers. During interviews, 24 plant species occurring at freshwater habitats with common or sporadic distribution were shown to anglers as single species or in congeneric pairs. Miscellaneous plant-related knowledge of anglers was also collected.ResultsAnglers identified a total of 16 plant species. They used 45 botanical or folk names. An angler knew the name of 4.6 plants on average and recognized 7.4 other species without naming it. According to our detailed analysis, anglers were able to name or at least recognize those plant species which are somehow related to fishing activities, are salient, and/or common. Moreover, anglers at Lake Velence recognized less plant species; however, they also had less years of fishing experience compared to anglers of the other two locations.ConclusionWe found that recreational FEK exists even in the case of freshwater plants which are not the main focus of anglers. It is highly presumable that recreational fishers would be able to provide reliable ecologically related data for scientific research establishing future citizen science projects of nature conservation.

Highlights

  • Documenting local ecological knowledge (LEK) has recently become a topic of considerable interest

  • The study revealed that anglers were able to provide valuable data about freshwater plant species, which were not in their main focus during fishing activities; we suggest that recreational anglers could be effectively involved in future thematic citizen science projects related even to freshwater plants

  • While it has been recently revealed that recreational fishers’ ecological knowledge can provide valuable information about different organisms and habitats, recreational FEK is understudied in many aspects and regions of the world

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Documenting local ecological knowledge (LEK) has recently become a topic of considerable interest. It has been proven that besides fish-related knowledge, as stock assessment [8], ecological decay [9], or different aspects of ethnozoology [10], FEK can be effectively used in many other areas of both maritime and freshwater research, as fishers often take even involuntarily valuable observations of their environment. They can report reliable data about sources and indicators of marine pollution [11] or ecosystem modelling [12]. These studies indicate that fishers and anglers can be interviewed successfully on many other ecological questions besides their best known topics, such as stock assessment, ethnoecology, or fish biology

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call