Barra del Colorado’s tourism-fishing sector held a community training session aimed at tightening standards for sportfishing and protecting the fishery that sustains much of the local economy. The workshop brought together anglers, boat captains, and tourism operators for a hands-on review of practices designed to increase post-release survival and reduce stress on target species. The session took place in Barra del Colorado Sur and was hosted at Tarpon Land Lodge.
Training topics centered on the mechanics of catching and releasing fish in ways that reduce injury and exhaustion. Organizers focused on selecting appropriate hooks, shortening fight time, keeping fish handling to a minimum, managing photos quickly and safely, and releasing fish in a condition that improves the odds of survival. The session also reviewed compliance with Costa Rica’s applicable size limits, catch quotas, and operating rules.
The workshop drew a clear line between two common modes of angling in Costa Rica: sportfishing that allows regulated personal consumption in some contexts, and tourism fishing built primarily around catch-and-release. It also promoted the use of circle hooks in appropriate situations as a method commonly used to reduce deep hooking and related mortality.
The effort forms part of a broader push to professionalize tourism fishing and strengthen the sector’s role in policy discussions affecting coastal communities. In Costa Rica, fishing tourism is regularly framed by industry and tourism sources as a meaningful driver of jobs and local spending, particularly in areas where guiding, lodging, food service, river transport, and small commerce depend on visiting anglers.
Barra del Colorado is a long-established destination for anglers on Costa Rica’s northern Caribbean, closely tied to the wetlands and waterways surrounding the Barra del Colorado Wildlife Refuge. The refuge, created in 1985, includes extensive rivers, lagoons, wetlands, and flooded forests that shape both the area’s ecology and its tourism offer.
Local organizers described the training as part of a community-led effort to raise standards after concerns about inconsistent practices and to protect the destination’s reputation in an increasingly competitive tourism market. The next steps outlined for the area include making protocols more visible, reinforcing visitor education, and improving coordination with authorities so that conservation is reflected in day-to-day operations, not just marketing.
FECOP, which works on sustainable fishing practices and the conservation of species important to tourism, has been involved in related national initiatives to strengthen organization, training, and representation for the tourism-fishing sector.





