PIERRE - Years of drought in South Dakota haven't deterred
anglers from their pursuit of fish.
New data released by the South Dakota Game, Fish and Parks
Department notes that anglers in South Dakota spent an estimated
2.2 million days fishing in 2006. According to surveys, residents
accounted for 84.5 percent of those days of fishing.
The material for this year's reports was gathered from 7,083
questionnaires filled out by anglers and compiled by Larry
Gigliotti, planning coordinator/human dimensions specialist for
GFP.
"We had a return rate on the surveys of almost 70 percent,"
Gigliotti said. "A return rate that high is a pretty good
indication of how important fishing is to South Dakotans and to the
anglers who visit this state."
According to the surveys, an estimated 1.6 million walleyes
were caught in 2006. Anglers also reeled in an estimated 1.1
million yellow perch, 237,000 bass, 217,000 trout and 154,000
northern pike. Residents and nonresidents spent a combined $4.8
million on fishing licenses in 2006.
The survey also measures angler attitudes toward catching
fish. "This is a complex process," Gigliotti said, "but if we have
an accurate understanding of anglers it helps us manage the
resource."