Yes. In commercial fishing we have a logbook that we have to keep. Every fish we encounter during that day is recorded. When we get to the dock, that logbook is cross-checked against what has been unloaded. We have to report that to a government agency at our expense.
In first nations and recreational fishing, there is data collection, but it is woefully inadequate on how much is actually being taken out. A lot of the food, social and ceremonial fish is not recorded. Recreational fishing is not recorded as well. Some lodges are doing some data collection and passing that along. With the recreational licence you do have to sometimes report. You get a survey and you do report what you caught during a month. But outside of that month....
When I went fishing in November, I got some prawns and stuff. I had to report that recreationally. But then if I went out trolling for chinook salmon in the summertime, nothing says I would have to report that.
My thought would be to increase the data collection so that you know what you're removing from the resource.