The following is our response to the Southern IFCA Black Bream Consultation. Below our response, you will find some guidelines on how you can submit your own thoughts on this consultation. We do not suggest a simple copy and paste of our own, or any other template as they rarely get considered as more than one response, but you can certainly take inspiration from our own.
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YourAnglingVoice welcomes the opportunity to respond to Southern IFCA’s consultation on voluntary conservation measures for breeding black bream in the Poole Rocks, Southbourne Rough and Purbeck Coast MCZs. Black bream (Spondyliosoma cantharus) is a highly valued recreational species and a critical element of the local charter-boat economy.
We note that all three designated MCZs were created to protect the unique spring spawning aggregations of black bream, which unlike most fish species, ‘nest’ to rear their young.
We strongly support the intent of measures that help ensure the fishery’s sustainability, provided they are clear, equitable, enforceable, and developed in full partnership with the angling community. Below we comment on each proposed ‘shared principle’ and suggest enhancements. We have aimed to keep our comments constructive and technically accurate, recognising that in practice any voluntary code will succeed only if it enjoys broad angler buy-in and clear communication.
Proposed ‘Shared Principles’
Southern IFCA’s Proposed Shared Principles for April – July (bream spawning season) comprise:
These measures, all voluntary, apply only within the three Dorset MCZs during the closed season. We encourage anglers and stakeholders to review each point critically. In general we agree with the precautionary goals of slot limits and bag limits, but emphasise that effectiveness will depend on enforcement, communication, and the broader management context (including commercial quotas under the forthcoming Fishery Management Plan). We offer the following observations and recommendations:
Slot Size (28–38 cm)
The proposed 28–38 cm slot aims to allow at least one spawning cycle (bream reach sexual maturity near ~24 cm) and protect the largest males, which guard the nests. We have no fundamental objection: the minimum 28 cm is higher than earlier IFCA sizes, and exceeds the scientifically-estimated breeding size. Protecting larger males should aid stock recovery, since anecdotal reports show many small bream but fewer ‘specimen’ size fish in recent years. This slot thus balances conservation with reasonable angler retention of table-sized fish.
However, rigid size limits can interact oddly with actual catch-and-release practice. For example, a small deep-hooked bream (say 26 cm) is unlikely to survive catch-and-release compared to a larger lip-hooked fish (say 32 cm), but the measures would reverse the logical nature applied by the angler on which fish to retain.
Our community prefers to return lightly hooked fish (even if big), in favour of keeping deep hooked ones with poor survival prospects, regardless of size; a practice that actually maximises survival. Strict slot definitions make that counter-intuitive choice appear non-compliant.
We therefore suggest Southern IFCA consider wording that acknowledges ethical catch selection. For example: “Anglers are encouraged to prioritise fish unlikely to survive on release (e.g. deep-hooked fish) when choosing which fish to keep within the slot.”
This could be included in the Good-Practice Guidance (see below). We also note that future management actions (e.g. the DEFRA-backed Black Bream Fisheries Management Plan) may introduce new size or gear rules for all sectors. It may confuse anglers if rules are rolled out piecemeal. Once extensive education on voluntary codes is underway, introducing new legal rules could “muddy the waters” for the public. We therefore suggest coordinating the timing of these voluntary measures with any FMP announcements, or at least clearly explaining their interim nature.
Key Points on Slot Size:
Recreational Bag Limit (6 fish/day)
We support a modest bag limit of 6 fish per angler per day (within the slot). Similar or lower daily limits are standard in MPAs and regulated fisheries (e.g., Sussex IFCA set 4/day in Kingmere MCZ). Such limits are widely used to ensure the benefits of each fish are shared among many anglers for years to come, rather than accumulating catches by a few and damaging the stock over a short period.
The challenge is monitoring and compliance. Under a voluntary regime, how will officers or peer groups verify that an angler has not already kept 6 bream that day? Charter boats often fish multiple marks (both inside and outside MCZs) in a single trip, so any boarding after-the-fact cannot easily tell where fish were caught. This means the bag limit relies on self-reporting and trust. In practice, most recreational anglers are conservation-minded and will follow the spirit of the rule. However, even a few publicly noticed violations can undermine confidence.
To strengthen adherence, we suggest:
In summary, the 6-fish limit is not unduly restrictive. Compliance is best achieved through clear communication and community buy-in. We urge Southern IFCA to invest as much effort in outreach on the bag limit as on conducting the consultation and subsequent drafting of the guidelines.
Handling, Release and Fishing Best Practices
We agree that robust guidance on catch-and-release techniques is vital. Indeed, best practices often spread from anglers themselves, not government mandates.
Formalising and promoting these will amplify voluntary compliance. Key points include:
In all cases, the guidance should be positive and evidence-based. We recommend co-creating any infographics or leaflets with experienced skippers and anglers. This has worked well for other fisheries in the past. A local charter skipper’s endorsement (“This is how we fish for bream”) resonates far more than a distant bureaucrat’s leaflet. We urge IFCA to enlist well-known local skippers or charter operators as ambassadors for the guidance, perhaps through short videos or port talks. Their voices will give credibility and inspire followers.
Enforcement, Monitoring and Compliance
Southern IFCA should recognise that voluntary measures work best when all stakeholders have “bought in,” but they still require oversight. Parliamentary evidence on UK MPAs makes this clear: voluntary codes can succeed in small, committed communities, but come with a risk of non-compliance unless backed by some enforcement capacity. For example, the Lyme Bay voluntary ban on scallop dredging saw near-universal compliance through peer pressure, but even a single breach led regulators to codify the restrictions for certainty. Conversely, simply writing a law without community engagement rarely guarantees compliance. With this in mind, we suggest the following to support compliance:
Some anglers may question why we would be requesting greater checks on enforcement for voluntary measures, but it is clear that if we cannot evidence compliance then the IFCA will, in the future, pursue legislated measures. The IFCA must not set us up for failure, it must have a clear and accurate way to measure compliance from the outset if the principle of voluntary uptake is not to be undermined.
Southern IFCA should make clear that these “principles” are a step toward statutory management if needed and Anglers must understand that agreeing to the code is the best way to avoid stricter byelaws later. Transparency on the process from the outset is essential.
Angler Engagement & Communication
Effective communication is the linchpin of voluntary success. We urge Southern IFCA and partner organisations to:
In short, avoid the “printed leaflet drop” approach alone. Leaders within the community must own the initiative. When skippers say “this is how I fish for bream,” everyone listens. Persuading anglers that the measures are in their interest is what truly achieves compliance.
Incentives & Angler-led Initiatives
Beyond education, positive incentives can accelerate uptake:
These mechanisms build social capital around the voluntary code. They echo the the Lyme Bay “Reserved Seafood” scheme where data provenance created market value. While a wild fish market is not the goal here, the principle is the same: reward good practice.
Marine Protected Area Context & Habitat Corridors
We urge Southern IFCA and DEFRA to consider spatial protections in tandem with these voluntary rules. Black bream migrate seasonally between the Isle of Wight, Poole Bay and Purbeck reefs. The current MCZs protect key nesting sites, but leave Poole Bay, a central corridor, largely unprotected. This gaping hole is exploited by mobile fishing (e.g. beam trawl) that can impact bream on migration routes.
A concrete recommendation is to extend MCZ protections to encompass Poole Bay. For example, designating the entirety of Poole Bay as an MPA with a bottom-trawl ban would create a safe corridor linking the known breeding grounds. This would benefit bream and many other species. It could be proposed for formal consideration in IFCA plans. At minimum, Southern IFCA should reaffirm that within the three MCZs there is currently zero commercial bream fishing allowed (if that is indeed the case), to address anglers’ concern that “released” fish might simply be re-caught by commercial boats. Publicly clarifying the full suite of protections (recreational and commercial) would improve buy-in.
Data Collection & Adaptive Management
Southern IFCA’s plan to create a voluntary year-round data-collection scheme for black bream is highly welcome.
Comprehensive catch data will be critical for adaptive management. We suggest:
Taken together, good data will demonstrate whether the voluntary code is working. If it isn’t, it also provides evidence for any future byelaw. This approach follows DEFRA guidance that management measures in MPAs should be evidence-based and developed through consultation.
The Studland Bay MCZ (also in Dorset) is an example: after an assessment and engagement, a voluntary no-anchoring zone was introduced in 2021. Data and stakeholder input made that measure well-targeted. Similarly, a well-publicised data scheme here can build trust that measures are being evaluated rigorously.
Voluntary vs Statutory – A Phased Approach
Lastly, we acknowledge that Southern IFCA has chosen a voluntary approach. As policymakers have testified, both voluntary and statutory measures have roles. We advise Southern IFCA to view this as a phased strategy: start with the voluntary Shared Principles to build habits and goodwill, but be clear that legal byelaws remain on the table if needed. This transparency is critical for anglers to understand why they are being asked to voluntarily take these measures. Parliamentary evidence on MPAs notes:
“There is room for both voluntary measures and statutory codification. In most cases you will need both… Voluntary measures might be helpful where you do not have the capacity to enforce by other means or monitor. It is still an evolving picture… regulators could do more to consider the voluntary approach fairly as part of their deliberations.”
In other words, we should not view this as “voluntary or mandatory” but as a step pathway. The initial voluntary code should be framed as the community’s own agreement, with the understanding that it may be reviewed and backed by law if compliance falls short. This perspective will encourage buy-in rather than resistance (i.e. “this is our code, not an imposition”). It also aligns with DEFRA/MMO practice of using codes of conduct first, then byelaws as needed.
Specifically, if voluntary compliance appears high by mid-July 2026 (measured via the above methods), Southern IFCA can publicise that success, which itself encourages more compliance. If not, a byelaw could be prepared over the autumn with a robust case. In either scenario, the anglers will have been part of the solution.
Summary of Recommendations
We believe that by coupling sensible voluntary rules with intensive community engagement and smart incentives, Southern IFCA can achieve near-total compliance and genuine conservation benefit without friction. Reinforce that these measures have been “co-developed with local anglers and skippers”, a vision we fully endorse.
We stand ready to assist Southern IFCA further (e.g. through testing methods, drafting outreach materials, or presenting at meetings) to ensure that Dorset’s black bream receive the protection they need for generations to come. Thank you for considering our comments. We respectfully submit this response and welcome any further dialogue.
Grant Jones, Lead Consultant
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