less than 5 cents. The National Survey found that personal 

 expenditures related to fresh-water fishing averaged about $4 

 per day in 1955- The pond fisherman may spend less to enjoy 

 a day's fishing than the person who fishes in other waters, 

 although this has not been determined at the national level. 

 If expenditures at the national rate for 1955 are assumed, 

 80 million dollars were spent by fishermen in 1959 in connec- 

 tion with fishing in ponds stocked by the Bureau. 



REFERENCES CITED 



Barnikol, Paul G., and Robert S. Campbell. 1952. Summary of 



selected pond studies in Missouri. Jour. Wildl. Mgt., l6(3): 

 270-271+. 



Bennett, George W. 1952. Pond management in Illinois. Jour. Wildl. 

 Mgt., 16(3): 249-253. 



Byrd, I. B. 1959 • Angling success and seasonal distribution of 

 catch in Alabama's State owned public fishing lakes. Trans, 

 of the 2i(-th North American Wildl. Conf.: 225-235* 



Holloway, A. D. 1951 • An evalxiation of fish pond stocking policy 

 and success in the Southeastern States. Prog. Fish-Cult. 

 13(4): 171-180. 



Moorman, Robert B. 195T* Some factors related to success of fish 

 popxilations in Iowa farm ponds. Trans, of the Amer. Fish. Soc, 

 86 (1956): 361-370. 



National Survey of Fishing and Hunting. 1955. U.S. Dept. of the 

 Interior, Fish and Wildlife Service, Circular kk. 



Sport Fishing Institute, Bulletin No. 90, May 1959* 



Swingle, H. S. 1949. Some recent developments in pond management. 

 Trans. Fourteenth N. Amer. Wildl. Conf.: 295-310. 



Swingle, H. S. 1952. Farm pond investigations in Alabama. Jour. Wildl. 

 Mgt., 16(3): 243-249. 



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