Commercial fishers want province to claw back ban on channel catfish catch - Action News
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Manitoba

Commercial fishers want province to claw back ban on channel catfish catch

Commercial fishers and professional anglers want Manitoba to clear up muddy rules governing the capture and sale of channel catfish.

Angling industry, however, fears channel cat harvest will threaten catch-and-release tourism

Professional angler Todd Longley, the owner and operator of the City Cats guiding service, is concerned about the formalization of a commercial fishery for channel catfish. (Submitted by Todd Longley)

Commercial fishers and professional anglers want Manitoba to clear up muddy rules governingthe capture and sale of channel catfish.

Up until Dec. 1, when the province introduced new fish-marketing regulations, commercial fishers in Manitoba were allowed to keep any channel cats among the largest fish in the province's rivers and lakes that wound up in their nets and could sell the creatures, in whole or in part, directly to consumers.

The federal Freshwater Fish Marketing Corporation did not purchase channel catsbecause the species is not kosher. The federalCrown corporation's Winnipeg processing plant is a kosher facility.

But the end of Freshwater Fish's monopoly on export sales late in 2017 created the potential for commercial channel catfish sales. To close that theoretical loophole, the province added channel catfish to the list of species that could not be sold commercially.

But commercial fishers complain this newrule prevents them from smoking and selling the odd channel cat that winds up in their nets.

They're now urging the province to allow them to resume the sale of channel catfish, arguing the bycatch is now going without being eatenor generating any revenue.

"That was a knee-jerk reaction. It could have been dealt with in a better way," said Ken Campbell, a Gimli, Man., commercial fisher who used to work as a biologist.

The channel catfish population would not be threatened by the occasional commercial catch and sale, he said.

Fishers never soughtoutthe species, Campbell said, noting most commercially caught channel cats wound upgetting smoked and then sold locally.

"They're a miserable fish to fish," saidCampbell of the river monsters that can easily grow as heavy as14 kilograms. "They make nasty work of nets."

Small frycompared to walleye

Commercial fishers catch anaverage of 1,532 kilograms of channel catfish a year, according to reports published by Manitoba Sustainable Development.

To place that catch in context, Manitoba commercial fishers catch an average of 5.2 million kilograms of walleye, also known as pickerel, every year.

People come to Manitoba to fish for these channel cats, and if they're overharvested, it could be devastating to us.- ToddLongley,City Cats Guiding Service

Complaints from commercial fishers have led the province to reconsider its recent ban on commercial channel catfish sales.

"The province is currently looking at ways to allow for some local marketing of catfish, without threatening the recreational fishery on the Red River," Sustainable Development spokesperson Glen Cassie said in a statement.

But this has led to concerns from the sportfishing industry, which relies onstrong channel catfish numbers to sustain catch-and-release tourism business.

"There's a lot of people thatrely on the channelcatfishingindustry to pay our bills. It's part of what we do," said ToddLongley, owner of City Cats Guiding Service.

"People come to Manitoba to fish for these channel cats, and if they're overharvested, it could be devastating to us."

Longley said he's opposed to a targeted channel cat fishery, but would tolerate the sale of bycatchin limited numbers.

"If it's responsibly done, I don't have a problem with that. But you're always thinking, what's going to happen if they overharvest like they did with the walleye. It's kind of scary," he said, adding people come from all over the world to catch and release channel cats in the Red River.

"They're the biggest, baddest fish we have in Manitoba. When they hit, they bend the rod right over, so it's kissing the water. You're fighting this fish for, like, 15 minutes and it's giving you abattle you've never had. Your arms are burning."

A meeting between provincial fisheries officials and sportfishers is slated for Thursday evening in Lockport.