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Author Topic: Mille Lacs Behind-scenes  (Read 1915 times)

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Offline Lee Borgersen

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                   Behind-the-scenes action on Mille Lacs

 May 14, 2014
 

 
Opening weekend fishing pressure on Mille Lacs appeared relatively light, according to the Department of Natural Resources. Still, the lake has seen considerable activity in recent weeks, as state fisheries managers tag walleyes and northern pike as part of an ongoing population study, and Chippewa band members close in on their 17,100-pound walleye quota.

Just before the opener, the bands had taken 12,608 pounds of Mille Lacs walleyes. Spearing accounted for a larger percentage of that harvest than in previous years, resulting, in some cases, in a larger average size of walleyes taken, compared to years when the bands’ harvest was almost exclusively by net.

Eight Chippewa bands harvest fish from Mille Lacs, and this year, due to the reduced allocation for the bands and sport anglers alike, some bands had individual quotas of only 1,000 pounds.

May 3 was a particularly good night for the Chippewa, when they registered a total harvest of about 3,000 pounds.

By contrast, that same night was not especially productive for DNR fisheries technicians who attempted to capture walleyes in gill nets and by electrofishing.

“We only tagged 860 fish that night,’’ said DNR regional treaty coordinator Tom Jones. By contrast, on May 7, DNR workers tagged 3,000 walleyes and northern pike.

Similar DNR studies were conducted on Mille Lacs in 2002, 2003, 2004, 2008 and last year.

By collecting and tagging a certain number of northerns and walleyes in early May, then recapturing a percentage of the tagged fish at the end of the month, the DNR can estimate how many of the fish are in the lake.

Last year, the lake’s walleye count was only 350,000, compared to 800,000 estimated in earlier surveys.

The DNR doesn’t estimate the number of anglers on Mille Lacs on opening weekend alone. Instead, in a few weeks, the agency will issue fishing pressure and harvest estimates for the entire month of May.

“We saw more activity around Mille Lacs this opener than we did last year, but we were iced over last year,’’ said Mille Lacs large lake specialist Eric Jensen.

“I don’t know if people were reacting to the late ice-out, the regulation [18- to 20-inch walleye harvest slot], the lower water temperature or the weather.’’
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Offline fishnpole

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Through May, walleye harvest, as determined via a Mille Lacs creel survey, was about 2,650 pounds of fish, according to Eric Jensen, large lake specialist in the DNR’s Aitkin office. During the same time period, the harvest of smallies was estimated to be about  1,200 pounds, while that of northern pike was about 3,000 pounds.
Hooking mortality was about 150 pounds last year in May, and about 200 pounds this year.
40,250 pounds were still left on our walleye quota as of June 1st.  Jensen stated that kill estimates for the first part of June are 2000 more pounds, with 150 lbs of hooking mortality figured in to that number. The second half of June will be made public soon.
 
No regulatory changes are currently being considered.

Offline kenhuntin

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hooking mortality has to be closer to 1500 lbs than 150 lbs.That is unless all the belly floating fish are actually sunbathing or have some kind of viral aquafinnbs disease
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Offline fishnpole

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This has been the contention of all the sports anglers on hooking mortality since these stupid "slots" even started.

Go with 40 inches of fish per license holder and you keep what you get.

 Eliminates the waste of floating fish that end up on someone's beach.

Time for our DNR to start thinking outside the box and make some regs that make some sense.