OutdoorNebraska

2014 Annual Report

Access digital copies of guides and regulations publications from the Nebraska Game and Parks Commission.

Issue link: http://digital.outdoornebraska.gov/i/481078

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 13 of 59

14 Nebraska Game and Parks Commission • 2014 Annual Report I M P R O V I N G N E B R A S K A F I S H E R I E S In September, nearly 1,000 13-inch paddlefish – a species never before produced in Game and Parks fish hatcheries – were stocked into Gallagher Canyon and the Midway Complex to create a population of this prehistoric fish in the Tri-County Canal system that will hopefully become fishable in the future. They were among the 48,590,168 fish (19 species) stocked into 253 Nebraska water bodies. In addition to the production and stocking of fish, the Nebraska Game and Parks Commission renovated fish communities at two lakes during the summer. Rotenone was applied to Rat and Beaver Lake, a 450-acre Sandhills lake, to eliminate common carp. The project was conducted in conjunction with the construction of fish barriers. At 332-acre Lake Yankton, the fish community was dominated by Asian carp that gained access during the 2011 Missouri River flood. Rotenone costs were shared with the South Dakota Department of Game, Fish and Parks. Comprehensive rehabilitation projects were completed in 2014 at Harlan County Reservoir (Phase I), Medicine Creek Reservoir, and Rat and Beaver Lake. Projects are currently underway on the Cedar River, at Conestoga Reservoir, Lake Helen in Gothenburg, Louisville SRA, and the Valentine National Wildlife Refuge. Fisheries biologists annually collect data to assess fish populations and evaluate management strategies including stocking, habitat improvements and fishing regulations. Specific projects were undertaken to estimate flathead catfish numbers in Branched Oak Lake, northern pike in Lake Wanahoo, walleye spawning population in Sherman Reservoir, common carp in Rat and Beaver Lake, channel catfish in southeast Nebraska rivers and reproduction and persistence of stocked plains topminnows in streams.

Articles in this issue

view archives of OutdoorNebraska - 2014 Annual Report