What are district salmon fishery boards?Salmon Fishery Districts
For the purpose of salmon fishery management, Scotland is divided into 54
statutory salmon fishery districts. The districts comprise of the
natural catchment areas of a specific river or group of rivers (see map
below). There are currently District Salmon Fishery Boards (DSFBs)
constituted for 42 of these districts. The following numbered districts
do not presently have a fishery board - 1, 2, 6, 36, 37, 41, 44, 45, 46,
47, 49 and 50. In recent years, progressive moves have been made to
amalgamate smaller districts to create larger, more coherent single
districts for the purpose of creating a single DSFB, and this process is
still ongoing. 

District Salmon Fishery Boards - Brief History
Although DSFBs had their origin in the salmon fisheries acts introduced in the
mid 1800s, their constitution was changed in 1986 and was provided in
the 1986 Salmon Act [now consolidated into the Salmon & Freshwater
Fisheries (Consolidation) (Scotland) Act 2003]. Salmon fisheries in
Scotland are privately owned and, in Scotland, the cost of the local
administration, protection and improvement of the fisheries is financed
by those owners (unlike England, there is no subsidy from the
Government). The district boards finance their work by levying a rate,
often a substantial rate, on the salmon fishery owners in the district.
Elected representatives of those owners provide the core of the
membership of a Board. However, since 1986, the boards are required also
to include representatives of salmon anglers and salmon netsmen in the
district. The Government made a further revision to the constitution of
the Boards in 1999 to allow for even wider representation on the boards
by bodies like SEPA and SNH or others, such as local angling clubs and
associations. This had been recommended in the Report of the Salmon
Strategy Task Force (1997). The intention of this was to ensure that the
legislation governing membership of DSFBs is more flexible, so that
there was no restrictive limit on the number of members.
The effect of this has been to ease the merger of smaller districts and their
DSFBs where appropriate, and also to allow the input of further
interests onto DSFBs, such as those described above. Powers and duties
The powers and duties of a DSFB are summarised below: Powers to act, undertake works and incur expenses for the protection and
improvement of the fisheries within their districts, for the increase of
salmon and sea-trout and the stocking of the district with these fish. to impose financial assessments on each salmon fishery in the district, and
to charge interest on arrears. to borrow funds, and to incur a wide range of expenditure in furtherance of
their powers and duties. to appoint bailiffs to enforce the salmon fisheries legislation. exempt persons from certain provisions of the law for scientific or other
purposes. to sue in the name of the clerk. Dutiesto appoint a clerk to maintain a list of proprietors within the DSFBs district to produce an annual report and audited accounts and to consider these at
an AGM to call a triennial electoral meeting Regulation of fisheries
Boards have no ability to make legal restrictions on fishing of their own
accord. Instead, they must ask Ministers to make regulatory measures for
their district, if the Board deems it appropriate. Until recently,
Boards were limited by statute to asking for local regulations to
prohibit the use of certain baits or lures or for orders to alter the
annual close time for fishing. Under other legislation, national
regulations have been made by Government for example, concerning the use
of netting twines in salmon fishing, the free passage of salmon in
rivers and the weekly close time for salmon fishing. With the passing of
the Salmon Conservation (Scotland) Act 2001, [now consolidated into the
Salmon and Freshwater Fisheries (Consolidation) (Scotland) Act 2003],
Boards can now make applications to Ministers for a greater range of
statutory measures to allow them to manage and conserve more effectively
the fish and fisheries in their district. For the first time, it would
also give Ministers powers to make regulations of their own initiative
to conserve salmon. 
Catch & Release of salmon is an important
and widely used tool to assist salmon management.Image courtesy of FRS. Research
A number of the bigger Boards now employ their own research staff and have
extensive and well monitored programmes of work in progress. These
programmes might include: stock restoration through the operation of
hatcheries; riparian habitat enhancement schemes and collaborative
projects with organisations and businesses operating in the catchment
whose activities might have an impact on fisheries such as forestry,
agriculture or hydro electric power generation. Strong relationships are
being developed with the fishery trusts, who play a key role in
scientific monitoring of fish populations and education. RAFTS is the
representative body for all Trusts in Scotland seehttp://rafts.hub.uk.com/
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