08 June, 2018

Fly-Fishing on Montana's Big Hole River, Signs of Climate Change Are All Around

Anyone who takes fly-fishing seriously behaves like a scientist. These anglers are biologists, knowledgeable in what's eating what, when and how. They are hydrologists, studying riffles and stream flow. They are naturalists, observing clouds and sunlight and the circulation of air as their rods flick back and forth across the big sky. They are, in a sense, climate scientists. And some, but not all, are deeply concerned about the effects of a warming climate on the cold-water species that inhabit blue-ribbon trout streams.
Nature is a powerful economic driver here, and
 livelihoods depend on cold water and healthy
 fish. People know it’s warming, but few will
say that's climate change
But to the extent that they act as climate scientists, partisan politics plays a role in many anglers' understanding of climate change. Here in Montana, with pristine rivers that are home to some of the best fly-fishing in the country, a majority of votes went for President Trump—and climate change is considered by many of them to be a natural phenomenon beyond human control. Nonetheless, climate change is having a profound influence on fly-fishing, from the timing of insect hatches to the long-term survival of the fish that give this sport its meaning.


Read the story by Meera Subramanian  from Inside Climate News - “Fly-Fishing on Montana's Big Hole River, Signs of Climate Change Are All Around.”

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