Bass Fishing Aug - Sept 2020 | Page 26

COLUMN: CONSERVATION ROGER PETERSON/ENGBRETSON UNDERWATER PHOTOGRAPHY FINDING BASS PART 3: competition Weighing the odds of various patterns based on resource availability ABOUT THE AUTHOR TJ Maglio is a tournament angler and outdoor writer based in Minnesota. He has a degree in wildlife ecology from the University of Wisconsin-Madison and has also worked professionally as a wildlife biologist and environmental consultant. W hen anglers think about where and why a bass might be in a specific area in a waterbody, a whole host of factors need to be considered, including seasonality, water temperature, water clarity or quality, and even the presence or absence of cover and structure. Understanding and unlocking those factors goes a long way toward finding and catching more bass. For the purposes of this discussion, let’s call those primary factors. In prior installments in this series, we explored additional or secondary factors that can help further unlock the bass location puzzle. Secondary factors are more nuanced, like how to understand local and regional habitat, as well as studying forage type and abundance to better predict location and hone presentation. The last of the secondary factors to consider is competition – not in the sense of anglers competing in a tournament, but rather how bass compete with other bass and other species for the limited resources available in any given fishery. Studying competition between and among species is one of the pillars of fisheries science, and although it’s hard to tangibly apply the understanding of competition directly to catching more or bigger bass, having baseline knowledge of how animals compete for limited resources can improve an angler’s ability to critically think. It also explains many of the conundrums encountered on the water. Bass Economics 101 Believe it or not, to help understand competition in bass, it helps to quickly review a little economic theory. The first concept to understand is that resources are scarce, meaning there’s a finite supply of forage species, ideal habitat, etc. available in any waterbody. All the bass (and other species that share 24 FLWFISHING.COM | MAJORLEAGUEFISHING.COM | AUGUST-SEPTEMBER 2020