Asian carp and the Great Lakes fishery: How much is at risk?

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Fishing poles on a Great Lakes fishing boat

The U.S. Great Lakes recreational fishery has a $7-billion economic impact in the region. Photo: Eddie Verhamme via Flickr

Do the Asian carp that are on the verge of invading Lake Michigan threaten the Great Lakes’ $4.5 billion sport fishery as Dave Dempsey writes on the Internet magazine Planetsave? Or is it the $7 billion sport fishery that Douglas Belkin reports in the Wall Street Journal?

Maybe they threaten the $7 billion combined sport and commercial fishery, as Chip Martin writes in the London (Ont.) Free Press . But then Ryan Gilbert, who works with Michigan Attorney General Mike Cox’s anti-carp Web site, says the Great Lakes salmon fishing is apparently worth $7 billion to Michigan alone.

There are a lot of conflicting reports bandied about in the midst of a big story.

One thing seems clear: something is fishy, and it’s worth $7 billion.

That number comes from a report compiled by a natural resources accounting firm for the American Sportfishing Association, and is the “latest in a series of respected economic analyses by ASA about sportfishing,” Marc Gaden, the Great Lakes Fishery Commission’s communications director and legislative liaison, explained in an email.

The $7 billion figure includes money spent directly on fishing licenses and gear as well as an estimation of the wider economic impact of Great Lakes anglers who pay to eat at restaurants and sleep in hotels, he said.

What it doesn’t include is the the economic impact of Great Lakes sportfishing in Canada or commercial fishing in either country, said Robert Southwick, president of Southwick Associates, the firm that compiled the report for the American Sportfishing Association.

The impact in Canada isn’t included because the report is based on the U.S.-only National Survey of Fishing, Hunting, and Wildlife-Associated Recreation, conducted every five years by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. The survey asks hunters, anglers and birdwatchers how much they participate in outdoor activities and how much they spend doing it.

A similar survey conducted by Fisheries and Oceans Canada found sportfishing on the Canadian side of the Great Lakes generated $443 million (that’s Canadian dollars) in 2005 — $228 million on boats, real estate and other “durable goods,” and another $215 million on food, lodging, charters and supplies.

The Great Lakes commercial fishery harvested $45 million worth of fish in 2000, according to a report from the Great Lakes Sea Grant Network. The  state- or tribe-licensed commercial fishery’s main targets are lake whitefish, yellow perch and walleye, which are caught in nets and sold by the pound.

Smelt trawler

Great Lakes commericial fisherman sold $45 million worth of fish in 2000, according the Great Lakes Sea Grant Network. Photo: Jeff Gunderson

So the economic impact of the entire Great Lakes fishery is worth at least $7 billion. But there’s reason to believe that even if the Asian carp were to colonize all of the Great Lakes and wipe out every fishable species, all that money wouldn’t disappear.

Former Great Lakes anglers wouldn’t start throwing their fishing budget straight in the garbage can, said Dan Talhelm, a natural resources economist who once sat on the Great Lakes Fishery Commission’s board of technical experts.

“They would spend it on something else,” he said. “So there would actually be a transfer someplace else in the economy that might end up being a fairly similar number.”

For example, they might start birdwatching or use the money to improve their houses.

“The economy will eventually readjust,” he said. “We’ll have more carpenters and more people selling things to birdwatchers.”

Southwick agrees that other parts of the economy would grow, but doubts that would completely make up for the loss of the fishery. That would only work if former anglers spent as much on their back-up hobby and continued to spend within the Great Lakes region.

Talhelm was one the first natural resource economists to put a dollar amount on the Great Lakes fishery with two reports in 1979 and 1985 that were compiled for the Great Lakes Fishery Commission.

In his 1985 report, he tagged the economic impact of the U.S. commercial and recreational Great Lakes fisheries at$2.3 billion to $4.3 billion. Adjusted for inflation, that’s around $4.6 billion to $8.5 billion.

Though Southwick’s $7 billion falls within that range, he says that the $8.5 billion end of Talhelm’s estimate is likely too high now because it’s based on the number of people that were fishing in 1985.

“Fishing participation has gone down in the Great Lakes in the last 20 years,” he said.

Talhem’s calculation also includes a number beyond the actual money spent by anglers to fish — a number he calls the “value of the resource.” It puts a value on the fish that are in the water rather than totaling the money anglers spend trying to get them out.

On the Great Lakes and other U.S. waters, fish are a public resource. That’s not the case everywhere in the world.

“If you go salmon fishing in Scotland, for example, the landowners own the right to fish,” he said. “If you want to go fishing, you have to pay them a fee.”

Talhelm calculated that the value of the Great Lakes fishing resource was $1.4 billion in the U.S. and Canada in 1985, or $2.8 billion adjusted for inflation. It’s essentially the amount of money that Great Lakes anglers would pay on top of license fees for the right to fish if it weren’t already a public right.

It’s an imaginary number that’s “derived with considerable difficulty from angler surveys or from detailed analyses of angler travel cost spending patterns,” Talhelm said.

But it’s important.

“If you take a long-run view at it, I’m not as concerned about the economic activity as I am the value of the resource, because that’s a permanent loss,” Talhelm said.

“The economy will eventually readjust,” he said “What won’t be recovered is the fishing that we love to do.”

12 thoughts on “Asian carp and the Great Lakes fishery: How much is at risk?

  1. The whole concept of a “Billion Dollar Fishery” is false and is there only for the benefit and continuation of the States funding of their mu[ti million dollar DNR budgets.
    The truth is, that 95% of all money either collected thru licenses or spent and twisted to create the “$$$ Billion $$$” figure for the open water fishery is based on INLAND LAKE and STREAM fishing, done by Mom, Dad and Kids while fishing Bluegill & Bass not SALMON. Very few people in reality ever go open water fishing and those that do, do so by way of Charter Fishing.
    The Great Lakes States that have undertaken this mismanagement of our resource and completely wiped out the vibrant and heritage rich Commercial fishery for their greed of Gov and tax payer monies to fund this lie…should be held
    accountable and exposed!

  2. This is a disaster!

    Where is a good place to read about what solutions are being implemented not proposed! Have they shut down the Chicago waterway system linking Lake Michigan to the Mississippi River yet? Once the carp get into the Lake it will be too late!

    List the solutions here that are happening now please.

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  5. Paul is rite! and no matter what the billions of dallars spent on the fishing industry now is spent on in the furture nothing can ever make up for our lakes, michigan has been thriving off of economicaly since we came here. I dont think losing our fishing in the biggest fresh water source in the world is okay no matter what it benefits it may bring other businesses. The great lakes fishery is our #1 natural resource, we are surounded by one of the most reluctant natural wonders on this planet and should go to all costs to save it in this case.

  6. The salmon gotta go! Thier dependant on keeping a high level of an invasive species (Alewives) to survive, alewives are detremental to the entire great lakes ecosystem, well documented

  7. Lets send the asian carp as an export to asia. Peru was exporting 50% of the world market in fish meal, now with warmer waters they are down to 28% and the price has gone from $1200 per ton in aug to $1700 per ton in dec.So it’s a know brainer, lets cash them in.

  8. Lets make this an opportunity. Add a hunting license to shoot the carp as the jump, i.e. like duck hunting, or a combo fishing and hunting license….

  9. Hi Jeff,
    Good story! I like your style. You had me at “something is fishy and worth $7 billion”, and finished nicely with the fishing we love to do. In between was a very nicely written, thoughtful and thought-provoking article that was balanced and refreshingly devoid of hype, mania, and all the usual presumptions. Well done.

  10. Seems like a lot of quibbling over a relatively minor detail.
    The amount of the loss won’t be for a year, it will compounded over generations. The impact of the invasives to biological diversity and quality of life is a tragedy that defies quantification it is, by far,
    more grave than any dollar figure.

  11. So, the Federal Gov’t once again shows it’s inability to see beyond the immediate issue, closing the Chicago locks, at least temporarily. Am I surprised? NO! If the worst possibility eventually occurs, will the Federal Gov’t compensate the tens of thousands of people who derive economic benefit from the current fish community in the Great Lakes? Guess what, HECK NO! So, this is just another example of how we are changing and fouling our natural world. I say, WE, because we as individuals and as a society are ultimately responsible.

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