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  • Idaho Outdoor News



    Fall Steelhead Harvest Season Opens on Clearwater
    Location: Idaho


    The fall steelhead harvest season opens October 15 on the main stem of the Clearwater River upstream of the Memorial Bridge, the South Fork Clearwater River, the North Fork Clearwater River below Dworshak Dam, and the Middle Fork Clearwater River below Clear Creek.

    The steelhead harvest season on the lower Clearwater River opened August 1 on a two-mile stretch of the lower Clearwater River from its mouth to the U.S. Highway 12 Memorial Bridge near Lewiston.

    The limits on these waters are two per day and six in possession.

    The harvest season already is open on the Snake, Salmon and Little Salmon rivers. The limits on these waters are three per day and nine in possession.

    Anglers may keep 20 steelhead for the fall season, which ends December 31. Only steelhead with a clipped adipose fin, evidenced by a healed scar, may be kept.

    Fish and Game expects another good steelhead run this year and reminds anglers to look for the clipped adipose fin indicating the fish is legal to be kept. Any steelhead that has an unclipped adipose fin must be released unharmed.

    New rules that took effect August 1 allow anglers to transport anadromous salmon and steelhead without the head and tail attached – but only under a number of conditions:

    · The fish must be recorded on the angler’s salmon or steelhead permit.

    · The processed fish must have the skin attached, including the portion with a healed, clipped adipose fin scar.

    · It must be packaged in a way that the number of harvested fish can be determined.

    · The fish must be processed ashore when the angler is done fishing for the day.

    · No processed salmon or steelhead may be transported by boat.

    · No jack salmon may be processed in the field.

    · Processed salmon or steelhead count toward an angler's possession limit while in the field or in transit.

    For additional information please consult the 2011-2012 fishing rules and seasons brochure, available at all license vendors, Fish and Game offices and online at: http://fishandgame.idaho.gov/public/fish/rules/steelhead.pdf.

    Kokanee Estimates have Biologists Breathing Easier

    The Idaho Department of Fish and Game recently completed the annual surveys of kokanee populations in three northern Idaho lakes, and for the third straight year, were very encouraged by what they saw.

    Each summer, biologists are out on Coeur d'Alene, Spirit and Pend Oreille lakes for several nights during the dark phase of the moon. While others sleep, they use a midwater trawl and hydroacoustics equipment, which is basically a very high tech fish finder, to estimate abundance of the small landlocked salmon.

    The work has to be done when the sky is at its darkest, hence working at night during the new moon, said Jim Fredericks, regional fishery manager.

    "If there's any light at all, the kokanee can see the net coming and avoid it, which leads to an inaccurate population estimate," he said.

    Biologists had been awaiting the results of the surveys to see whether the high water in May and June took a toll on the populations. History has shown that high runoff through Pend Oreille and Coeur d’Alene can cause a large portion of the kokanee population to out-migrate.

    "In essence, these landlocked salmon treat the big lakes as their ocean, but in flood years like 1996 and 1997 there's a lot of current moving through the lakes, and the kokanee will follow it right out of the lake," Fredericks said. He had speculated – and hoped – that the high water in 2011 wouldn't be as detrimental as some previous years.

    "This year, runoff wasn't exceptionally high, but it lasted several weeks, which is a different scenario than the very high magnitude, but short duration floods of 1996 and 1997," he said.

    Fortunately for biologists, anglers and the animals that depend on kokanee, it looks like most of the kokanee stayed home. Andy Dux, a principal research biologist working on Lake Pend Oreille, said the estimates show the highest number of kokanee spawners they’ve seen in Pend Oreille since 2004. Additionally, juvenile kokanee were more abundant and should contribute to bigger population increases in coming years. The continued rebound of kokanee in Lake Pend Oreille indicates predator removal efforts have improved kokanee survival.

    "If the upward trend we are seeing continues, I'm optimistic that we’ll have a real shot at re-opening a kokanee fishery again within the next couple of years," Dux said.

    In Coeur d'Alene Lake, the population was the strongest it's been since before the 1996 and 1997 floods put a dent in the population that's taken over a decade to rebuild.

    "For three years now, we’ve seen very good numbers of all age-classes of fish, indicating the population has fully recovered," Fredericks said. The recovery in recent years has made it possible for Idaho Fish and Game to increase the limit from only six fish last year to 15.

    “The fishery is back on, and anglers are taking full advantage of it,” Fredericks said, noting that kokanee fishing has been very good all summer.

    Similar to Coeur d'Alene Lake, the population in Spirit Lake was strong across the board.

    Kokanee are small, landlocked sockeye salmon found in many lakes throughout the west. They not only provide very popular sport fisheries, but they are the prey-base for many large trophy fisheries, such as Chinook in Coeur d’Alene Lake and bull trout and Kamloops rainbow trout in Pend Oreille Lake. Healthy populations are not only important to anglers, but to many other animals as well, such as bald eagles.

    Each fall, thousands of kokanee in northern Idaho lakes move to spawning beds around the shoreline where they deposit their eggs before dying. The abundance of spawned out fish draws dozens of eagles that have become the focus of a popular wildlife viewing activity.


    News Source: Idaho F&G - Oct. 04, 2011

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