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Posted

There are two main spawning spots on Vermilion that I know of. I'm near the one on the west end of Vermilion. The walleye haven't been as good on this end yet they don't pull any fish out from here. They've been pulling walleye out of the east end spawning spot in Pike Bay, and for some reason walleye have been doing better over there.

 

I have no doubt that there are many variables that go into the equation, but you can't ignore that the end they put the 10% back into has been doing better than the one where they leave it alone.

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Posted

Article in recent The Timberjay explaining breakdown of where the eggs are going....

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Posted

Assuming the ratios given to Cliff by the hatchery are accurate, then:

 

With Hatchery:  708 quarts X 100,000 eggs is 70,800,000 eggs.  Survival rate is (low end) 75%, so total fry is 53,100,000.  If 10% go back into Vermilion, that's net +5,310,000 new fry this year.

 

Natural reproduction:  70,800,000 eggs at 3% (high end) survival rate would be net +2,124,000 for vermilion this year.

 

5,310,000/2,124,000 is 2.5X the walleye fry in vermilion this year compared to natural reproduction.

 

I'd take a 250% return on pretty much anything!  

 

Ancillary benefit is +47,790,000 fry to other MN waters.  

 

I'm sure there's a downside, but I can't see it. 

 

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Posted

The walleyes that spawn at the Pike River dam are supposedly only about 5% to 8% of the walleyes that spawn on Vermilion.

The rest spawn in other rivers, creeks, reefs. and  on shorelines.

Cliff

 

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Posted

Cliff - why do they quit taking spawn when they haven't filled up to capacity, and the spawn is still active?  Years ago my dad was convinced that the DNR took adult walleyes out of Vermilion and transferred them to other lakes; do you think that ever occurred?  The hatchery is beneficial to Vermilion and other lakes, but why do they plant fry in lakes where they have no chance of reproducing?  Aren't there enough lakes where they can reproduce to some extent to plant them in?

Posted

True north, head true west on vermillion and find out for yourself how strong the walleye population is !! DNR stats and numbers are meaningless on that end ,and it is a shame! trolloni is short hand for TROLL ONLY to catch fish.

Posted

I have also heard the rumors that the DNR removed adult fish to plant into other lake years ago. I heard that a few locals had gone as far as to threaten to dynamite the Pike River Dam if that practice did not stop!  I have never heard any proof either way on that report.

I assume that fry are planted into lakes that they cannot reproduce in to give fishermen in the area of those lakes the chance to fish for walleyes. Most lakes that the walleyes can reproduce in naturally usually do not require yearly planting to maintain a fishable walleye population.

The DNR quit milking walleyes early because they had no demand for fry elsewhere in the state.

They very seldom try to fill all of the egg batteries in the hatchery anyway.

Cliff

 

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Posted

Good Stuff Cliff!  Always appreciate your input.  

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