The MN DNR musky study involves collecting information and studying musky populations; measurements are recorded, sex of the fish is identified, and an electronic tag implanted in the fish is scanned, before it is returned to the lake. One day, it could take an angler’s lure and provide a long-remembered thrill.
This process allows the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources to make well-informed decisions about how to stock musky and manage harvest.
“As anglers head into the musky season that began June 4, they are enjoying opportunities that came about largely due to research-based management,” said Don Pereira, fisheries section chief. “Better information can lead to better fishing in a state that’s already a renowned musky fishing destination.”
The DNR studies musky in a variety of ways, including looking into everything from musky ancestry using DNA analysis, to how well musky grow and survive once they’re stocked in certain southern Minnesota lakes. The research builds on past work that identified how to best capture and rear a large-growing native strain of musky, stock this strain into appropriate waters, and manage the harvest.
“This large-growing strain is one reason musky anglers are able to catch fish in the 50-plus inch trophy range,” Pereira said. “There are enough of these fish in the population that many anglers asked for the change to a 54-inch minimum length on musky in most waters of the state, which is in effect this year.”
Along with a growing interest in musky fishing, research taking place around the state aims to fine-tune musky management.
Walker area fisheries: Using DNA to study musky ancestry
With the help of DNA analysis, researchers can trace the ancestry of individual fish, including musky. The work has real-world management implications.
“It’s a pretty cool concept. We’re starting to do more of it now on special projects around the state,” said Doug Schultz, Walker area fisheries supervisor.
For one study, Walker area fisheries teamed up with Loren Miller, a fisheries research geneticist, as well as anglers who were shown how to collect musky scale samples for DNA analysis.
The study’s central question: In Baby and Man lakes in the Walker area, stocking of the less desirable Shoepack Lake strain of musky ended in the 1970s. Now, what is the residual effect of Shoepack strain musky on the current musky population in these two lakes?
“Strain” in fish is similar to heritage in humans: fish from a geographic location of origin tend to have similar physical characteristics that may differ from those of other locations. From the 1950s to the early 1980s, musky from Shoepack Lake were reared and stocked in several Minnesota lakes, even in lakes where a native musky population already existed.
It was later seen that the Shoepack strain grew slower and reached smaller maximum sizes than the Mississippi strain, which are native populations connected to the upper Mississippi River drainage system, including Leech Lake. The use of the Shoepack strain ended in favor of the faster growing and larger Leech Lake-Mississippi strain.
On Baby and Man lakes, the study found that Shoepack ancestry declined to only nine percent, down from 13 percent in 1995. Yet, historical Shoepack strain stockings are still having an impact on size potential of some fish in today’s musky populations.
“This study could set the stage for future musky management decisions on lakes with residual Shoepack ancestry,” Schultz said. “A study using DNA adds a new level of certainty about the effects of past stocking. That helps as we take multiple factors into account when making management decisions aimed at improving opportunities for anglers.”
Montrose area fisheries: Tagging and recapturing musky after new stocking
Muskies were first stocked in 2011 in the Sauk River Chain of Lakes, giving anglers in the St. Cloud area a chance to fish for muskies close to home.
For Montrose area fisheries staff, the stocking offers a rare chance to track the growth of a new fish population using electronic tags.
“It’s a new fish to the system. We don’t really know what the growth potential is out there. It will be neat to find out,” said Joe Stewig, Montrose area fisheries supervisor. “Some of these fish will be marked, and we will then be able to track their growth throughout their lives.”
Beginning in 2013, Montrose area staff started implanting electronic tags into muskies, work paid for through hunting and fishing license dollars and with financial help from the Hugh C. Becker Foundation through the St. Cloud chapter of Muskies Inc. After fish are tagged, the goal is to recapture some of these fish during fall electrofishing, when crews look specifically for these stocked muskies.
“With continued funding, we’ll be able to use these tags to monitor the growth of this newly established musky population,” Stewig said. “Using this method goes above and beyond the standard lake survey.”
West metro fisheries: Tagging musky to evaluate stocking efforts
To study the effectiveness of musky stocking in three Twin Cities metro area lakes, the DNR’s west metro fisheries staff is working on a musky tagging project in partnership with the Muskies, Inc. Twin Cities Chapter and Hugh C. Becker Foundation.
The study taking place on Lake Minnetonka, Bald Eagle Lake and White Bear Lake measures the survival numbers of year-old musky, called yearlings, and smaller musky less than a year old, called fingerlings.
“All three lakes have high northern pike populations. So we normally don’t stock musky in the face of that kind of competition,” said Daryl Ellison, west metro area fisheries manager. “But there’s an interest in it because they’re metro lakes.”
The study results will help evaluate the DNR’s standard stocking ratio of one yearling per three fingerlings – important knowledge because yearlings cost more to stock than fingerlings.
“Initial results seem to support the 3:1 ratio, but more study is needed,” Ellison said. “The study was showing some positive results for fingerlings in Lake Minnetonka.”
Windom area fisheries: Studying Fox Lake muskellunge
Fox Lake is Minnesota’s southernmost musky lake, and was first stocked with musky in 1999. Years later, electronic tags began informing an ongoing study on musky in that lake.
Each spring from 2011 to 2013, Windom fisheries staff counted, measured and weighed musky captured with nets. They also implanted musky with electronic tags, and recorded information about the growth of individual fish already implanted with a tag from a previous spring.
Starting in 2012, musky fingerlings have received electronic tags before they are stocked into the lake. To date, more than 1,200 muskellunge of varying sizes have been tagged in Fox Lake.
“Through this study on Fox Lake, we’ll gain pertinent information on population abundance, growth and longevity of musky,” said Nate Hodgins, Windom area fisheries assistant supervisor. “It will give us a good picture of musky populations in similar size and type lakes.”
Windom fisheries plans to use the data to help evaluate how Fox and perhaps other lakes are stocked in smaller, southern Minnesota lakes in the future. They will be netting musky and updating Fox Lake population numbers every two years starting in 2015.