On Sep 22, 11:33 pm, "John" bass wrote:
Forty said:
An interesting article in today's Times about a trout
fishery lost to big bass.
Maybe not. All LM and SM bass are exotic species and introduced west of the
Rockies. Neither are native to Oregon nor are bluegill and crappie - all are
introduced. IMHO jail time is not enough for these thugs who do this. We
should bring back corporal punishment for them.
Maybe all is NOT well for these exotics.
Davis Lake flows into manmade Wikiup Reservoir on the upper Deschutes. Just
above Wikiup on the Deschutes is manmade Crane Prairie which has a very
large native trophy trout fishery that is/was threatened by jerks who
introduced LM bass, bluegill, crappie, and recently stickleback minnows into
Crane Prairie. The bass are disappearing. Trout are doing well. Last Sunday
my son and I saw sticklebacks every time we looked into the water - no
matter where we looked. According to one theory, trout have no problem
feeding on sticklebsacks but LM bass especially get punctured by their
spines and are dying outg. It is so bad that in May/June 2007 during LM
Bass spawn, Oregon F&G and local BASS clubs asked the public NOT to disturb
bass spawning to keep them alive. ROFLMAO.
So maybe someone will put sticklebacks into Davis Lake and all will be back
to normal, as well as normal could be.
Or maybe jerks will put tui chubs into Davis Lake like they did again into
Diamond Lake. It'll take rotonone and millions of bucks to kill everything
out.
I've asked several F&G personnel in several states why they don't mount a
big education program to get people to stop transporting and planting
exotics. They all say more education and press just makes some people do it
more often. UGH! Go figure.
Bye Bye bass in Crane g
John
The US Fish Commission planted a lot of fish starting in 1874. That's
how Stripped bass and Shad got to California. This link is about
their fish car.
http://training.fws.gov/history/FishCar.pdf
I have another book which relates how a lot of smaller projects were
carried out by railroad crews that would carry fish int the engine
tender. When they got to a bridge they would stop on the bridge, net
the fish and throw them out. Carp and small mouth bass were planted
in this way.