Steve Arend
04-04-2006, 03:39 PM
Lake experiment to restore delicate balance
By Kristopher Wenn
Herald Times Reporter
MANITOWOC — Although charter-boat anglers caught a near-record amount of chinook salmon last year in Lake Michigan, the four states surrounding the lake have agreed to stock it with 25 percent fewer chinook this year in an effort to help prevent the fish from eating themselves into oblivion.
Wisconsin has agreed to cut its statewide stocking of chinook salmon by 21 percent, according to Steve Hogler, DNR regional fisheries biologist.
But no one knows whether the biological experiment — cutting chinook salmon stocking levels and therefore propping up the lake's supply of alewife, the small fish that chinook salmon eat almost exclusively — will work.
Fewer young 'kings' stocked (http://www.htrnews.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20060403/MAN0101/604030448/1358)
By Kristopher Wenn
Herald Times Reporter
MANITOWOC — Although charter-boat anglers caught a near-record amount of chinook salmon last year in Lake Michigan, the four states surrounding the lake have agreed to stock it with 25 percent fewer chinook this year in an effort to help prevent the fish from eating themselves into oblivion.
Wisconsin has agreed to cut its statewide stocking of chinook salmon by 21 percent, according to Steve Hogler, DNR regional fisheries biologist.
But no one knows whether the biological experiment — cutting chinook salmon stocking levels and therefore propping up the lake's supply of alewife, the small fish that chinook salmon eat almost exclusively — will work.
Fewer young 'kings' stocked (http://www.htrnews.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20060403/MAN0101/604030448/1358)