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Old 06-05-2012, 08:00 PM
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Originally Posted by thegr8cody View Post
Correct me if im wrong here but how is it greedy to "reduce" the limit? I would think greedy would be raising the limit?and as far as sportsmanship I believe it was stated in a previous post about it possibly being people reducing the limit to help preserve the population of trouts so theire kids can fish the lake and catch trout as well. to me thats being a sportsman. Not tryin to start an arguement just confused about the greed part
Sometimes the best deer management is to harvest more does because the deer are overpopulated and there is simply not enough food to feed all the hungry mouths. Old deer management thinking was to harvest only bucks and leave all the does for the benefit of the herd. When applied to overpopulated situations, this is bad management.

Preserving the trout resource ultimately means preserving the habitat and food sources on which the trout depend. Data shows that the spotted seatrout in Calcasieu estuary are thinner and growing more slowly than they were before the limit change in 2006. The most likely explanation is that there are more trout relative to their available food sources than there used to be. Spotted seatrout in the estuary used to be fatter than the statewide average. After the change in the limits, the data show they are thinner than the Louisiana average.

Some have suggested that greedy/lazy guides may have supported lowering the limits so they would only have to help clients catch 15 trout per day rather than 25 which would take considerably less time and less gas and allow them to fit in more trips in a week.
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