POR Pike Update
Posted: Mon Jul 19, 2010 5:06 pm
Bruce Bolding was scheduled to discuss Pend O'Reilles pike at last week's Chapter 57 meeting, but couldn't make it due to an I-5 closure caused by a traffic accident, so I'll tell you what I know about what's going on with POR pike.
Just a year or so ago, the angling community was lobbying WDFW to enact regulations to protect the trophy pike in the POR river, so we'd continue to have a quality pike fishery there. A consensus emerged within the pike angling community in favor of a slot limit as a means to limit harvest of big pike, but WDFW wanted to conduct a field study before drafting any regulations. Unfortunately, the study fell victim to the state budget crisis, and it looked like WDFW action on the POR pike fishery would be stalled for several years. However, Kalispell tribal biologists stepped into the breach by collecting data and turning it over to WDFW, so the lack of field data is no longer an obstacle.
Meanwhile, the situation on the river has changed. The pike are reproducing like crazy, are overrunning the river, and WDFW is now under pressure to control them. Consequently, the management plan WDFW comes up with will be aimed at protecting the river's native species from the pike, not to provide a sport fishery for pike. But the pike overpopulation problem is a concern to dedicated pike anglers, too, because a huge population of small "hammer handle" pike won't provide quality fishing.
WDFW may look at several different options for controlling the pike. One method involves mechanical harvest of pike using nets to reduce the population. Obviously, the effect of this is only temporary, unless they continue netting the pike on an ongoing basis. Montana tried a slot limit at one of their overpopulated pike lakes, which so far appears to be working. The theory is that by keeping more large pike in the water, they'll eat enough small pike to keep the population under control.
The main point I want to make here is that whatever WDFW eventually does to protect native fish species in the POR probably will benefit pike anglers, so we should support it. Anyone who's ever fished in the Midwest knows that a lake full of "hammer handles" isn't much fun. If WDFW's efforts to control the population of small pike results in keeping more big pike in the river, isn't that what we've wanted all along? So, when WDFW finally announces their management plan for POR pike, don't get excited and react negatively before you've read the fine print. The reality is that things are moving in the direction we, as sport anglers, want to go.
Just a year or so ago, the angling community was lobbying WDFW to enact regulations to protect the trophy pike in the POR river, so we'd continue to have a quality pike fishery there. A consensus emerged within the pike angling community in favor of a slot limit as a means to limit harvest of big pike, but WDFW wanted to conduct a field study before drafting any regulations. Unfortunately, the study fell victim to the state budget crisis, and it looked like WDFW action on the POR pike fishery would be stalled for several years. However, Kalispell tribal biologists stepped into the breach by collecting data and turning it over to WDFW, so the lack of field data is no longer an obstacle.
Meanwhile, the situation on the river has changed. The pike are reproducing like crazy, are overrunning the river, and WDFW is now under pressure to control them. Consequently, the management plan WDFW comes up with will be aimed at protecting the river's native species from the pike, not to provide a sport fishery for pike. But the pike overpopulation problem is a concern to dedicated pike anglers, too, because a huge population of small "hammer handle" pike won't provide quality fishing.
WDFW may look at several different options for controlling the pike. One method involves mechanical harvest of pike using nets to reduce the population. Obviously, the effect of this is only temporary, unless they continue netting the pike on an ongoing basis. Montana tried a slot limit at one of their overpopulated pike lakes, which so far appears to be working. The theory is that by keeping more large pike in the water, they'll eat enough small pike to keep the population under control.
The main point I want to make here is that whatever WDFW eventually does to protect native fish species in the POR probably will benefit pike anglers, so we should support it. Anyone who's ever fished in the Midwest knows that a lake full of "hammer handles" isn't much fun. If WDFW's efforts to control the population of small pike results in keeping more big pike in the river, isn't that what we've wanted all along? So, when WDFW finally announces their management plan for POR pike, don't get excited and react negatively before you've read the fine print. The reality is that things are moving in the direction we, as sport anglers, want to go.