Of Interest
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Saving Yellowstone Lake By WES SMALLING Casper Star-Tribune staff writer Thursday, March 20, 2008 2:06 AM MDT
For more than a decade, fisheries biologists at Yellowstone National Park have been fighting what seems to be a losing battle to save Yellowstone Lake's vanishing native cutthroat trout. But over the last couple of years, crews have finally begun making some headway in the war against the non-native predators that have been driving the lake's native trout to the brink.
And help may be on the way.
The East Yellowstone Chapter of Trout Unlimited in Cody is spearheading an effort with Yellowstone National Park and the U.S. Geological Survey to raise $169,000 to fund a research project that could help save Yellowstone Lake's native cutthroat trout. The four-year research project would be conducted by scientists from Montana State University and the USGS who would try to find ways to eradicate unwanted lake trout by targeting their eggs and spawning beds with a variety of lethal methods, including electroshocking, ultrasound, microwaves, biodegradable polymers and fish-killing toxicants. more...
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New photos boost fly fishing Tuesday, January 22, 2008
Digital images of colorful fish and exotic places that pop off the page at you are fueling a 21st- century revival in fly fishing, the likes of which the sport’s painstaking mechanics and mandatory patience could never have accomplished.
more...
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History of S.D. Fishing Captured in Book
PIERRE, S.D.– South Dakota State University, with cooperation from the S.D. Department of Game, Fish and Parks, has recently published a book capturing the “History of Fisheries and Fishing in South Dakota.”
The 477-page book compiles contributions from a number of authors who share insight on how fish management in this state has evolved, culminating with a final chapter entitled, “South Dakota Fisheries: Predictions for the Next 20 Years.”
The book is available to the public through Internet sale only. Copies may be purchased for $10 by credit card from the Game, Fish and Parks Web site at www.sdgfp.info, then clicking on the link to “Shop GFP Online.”
Books are not available from any Game, Fish and Parks office.
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