![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
In article , matthew walker
wrote: I've been fishing some of my regular locations on the river Trent. are eroding the pike stock in the Trent. This is not the odd pike, They Take the Jacks as well, will this not affect the future of pike? Like I have stated before this is on a large scale, they are also taking other preditor species such as perch. They'd need to be taking them from the entire catchment - the Trent is a big enough system that they'll never get the lot. Whilst you might have a temporary local shortage - it might last a few months, long enough to deter the less persistent pikers - the very next set of big floods will move fish around and you'll have a natural redistribution. At the rate jacks grow this years fry are already around 6" and just vacating the really shallow headwaters and tributaries. They are running the gauntlet of last years fry, now over a pound in weight, who must also move down a little into the range of the jacks that are just growing big enough to catch on a line... Take a look at a big (15lb+) female - pike eggs are small, she'll spawn tens of thousands in a tiny ditch next february - only a very few females need to survive to keep up the population. if -everyone- fishing the river was taking fish you would probably notice a drop in numbers but there would still be a range of fish present and a few of them might become very big. It's not as if modern trawlers were scraping the bottom every day. I really do think that most fisheries are -improved- by removing a few of the larger fish every year. Round here (Dorset) the chalk streams have a proportion of the trout and grayling removed by anglers and regular electrofishing sessions to remove pike. There is no shortage of pike and some of them grow very big. Nowadays the keepers return large pike (because they keep the jacks down) and remove as many as possible of the jacks - this gives them the best size profile for the effort involved. If they take out the biggest pike they know they will have a jack population explosion next year. Cheerio, -- Fishing: http://www.fishing.casterbridge.net/ Writing: http://www.author.casterbridge.net/derek-moody/ uk.rec.fishing.game Badge Page: http://www.fishing.casterbridge.net/urfg/ |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|