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DICK ELLIS Click here for full PDF Version from the March/April Issue. Seeking Wolf PhotosOWO’s informal census continuesOn Wisconsin Outdoors’ informal wolf census continues. Please send your trail cam photos of wolves in Wisconsin to: wolves@onwisconsinoutdoors.com. List the county where the photos were taken, the date, and verify the number of wolves visible in each photo. Your name will not be published. OWO publishers do not b...
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DNR seeks feedback on Lake Michigan management strategies

MADISON, Wis. - The Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources will convene
three public meetings in late June to discuss management strategies and
opportunities for Lake Michigan in light of continued challenges facing
salmon populations and the alewives they feed on.

The meetings will focus on a variety of potential management actions to
ensure continued diverse opportunities for sport anglers. Topics for
discussion will include finding the right species mix, use of net pens,
hatchery production, habitat restoration and the potential to increase focus
on species with the greatest chances of thriving given the record low levels
of open water forage fish such as alewives and rainbow smelt.

The initiative represents part of an ongoing effort by DNR to ensure
anglers' voices are heard as ecological changes continue to alter Lake
Michigan's food web. The meetings follow announcement of a proposal by the
Lake Michigan Committee, a multistate organization charged with managing the
Lake Michigan fishery, to reduce lake-wide stocking of chinook salmon by
61.5 percent from current levels, beginning in 2017.

This proposed reduction would equate to a 56 percent chinook salmon
reduction (from 810,000 to 355,000) for Wisconsin. The other states that
border Lake Michigan would also take significant chinook salmon stocking
reductions through this proposal. Michigan would go from 560,000 to 200,000,
Illinois would go from 230,000 to 90,000 and Indiana would go from 200,000
to 45,000. The fisheries managers across Lake Michigan believe that these
reductions are necessary to maintain quality growth rates and healthy
chinook for the fishery and to avoid a crash of the alewife forage base of
the lake. Stocking has been a critical management tool to control alewives
and provide a fantastic fishery over the years and while we have had to make
reductions in the past, Wisconsin is still a leader in chinook salmon
stocking.

"Since 2011, Wisconsin DNR has held more than 40 meetings, public input
opportunities and attended sport and commercial meetings to work with
anglers in developing a shared vision for management of our prized Lake
Michigan fishery," said Todd Kalish, deputy director of DNR's fisheries
bureau. "Recent data, including acoustic and trawl surveys, shows a
continued decline in alewife populations and the predator-prey ratio has
reached the tipping point. By working with anglers, we hope to preserve the
salmon fishery to the greatest extent possible while developing and
accessing options to enhance and maintain a diverse fishery. There is a
framework in place that informs managers on the appropriate level of salmon
and trout stocking numbers in Lake Michigan. This level can go up and down
based on the available information that we are continually evaluating and
upgrading."

Kalish said economic hardships caused by collapse of the salmon fishery in
Lake Huron starting in 2003-04 offer a cautionary tale for Wisconsin given
the more than $114.3 million in annual retail expenditures by Great Lakes
sport anglers here. By working to preserve Lake Michigan's salmon fishery,
DNR and its partners in surrounding states aim to navigate through the
current predator-prey challenges to preserve and protect this economically
important fishery into the future.

"We are particularly concerned about the many charter fishing operators on
these waters and will be working to identify new opportunities to promote
the diverse Lake Michigan fishing opportunities," Kalish said.

If this proposal is implemented, Wisconsin fishery managers would continue
efforts to ensure a fall salmon run in Lake Michigan Rivers and streams in
10 counties. Anglers attending the upcoming meetings will be asked to
provide feedback on Wisconsin's plans to distribute chinook salmon at
locations including Strawberry Creek Rearing Facility, Green Bay and Lake
Michigan tributaries or ports in Kenosha, Racine, Milwaukee, Ozaukee,
Sheboygan, Manitowoc, Kewaunee, Door, Oconto and Marinette counties.

Brad Eggold, DNR southern Lake Michigan fisheries supervisor, said that
while chinook salmon would remain an essential part of the diverse Lake
Michigan fishery, going forward, species that show more adaptability in
their feeding preferences may play a larger role. In addition to chinook,
each year DNR stocks hundreds of thousands of coho salmon, brown trout and
rainbow trout at more than 40 locations along the Lake Michigan coast. The
Wisconsin waters of Lake Michigan also receive about 800,000 lake trout
produced by U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.

"Working with anglers, we intend to use a variety of techniques to optimize
survival of stocked trout and salmon," Eggold said. "At the same time, we
will continue to work with stakeholders on projects to enhance the salmon
and trout fishery on Lake Michigan. We also intend to review our management
practices to ensure we are able to respond quickly as new information
becomes available."

The three meetings are set for 6 to 8 p.m.:
*       Monday, June 27, Lakeshore Technical College, Centennial Hall West,
1290 North Ave., Cleveland, WI 53015
*       Wednesday, June 29, Brown County Library, Auditorium, 515 Pine St. ,
Green Bay, WI 54301
*       Thursday, June 30, UW-Milwaukee School of Freshwater Sciences,
Ballroom, 600 E. Greenfield Ave., Milwaukee, WI 53204

To learn more about Lake Michigan fisheries management
<http://dnr.wi.gov/topic/fishing/lakemichigan/FishManagementReports.html>
including historic stocking trends
<http://dnr.wi.gov/topic/fishing/Documents/LakeMichigan/StockingSummary2015.
pdf
>  visit DNR.wi.gov <http://dnr.wi.gov/>  and search "Fishing Lake
Michigan <http://dnr.wi.gov/topic/fishing/lakemichigan/> ."