Angler paid nearly $50,000 for fishing the Columbia and Snake rivers 
By Annette Cary US Source: tri-cityherald 1/16/2021

Anglers who went after northern pikeminnow last summer took home $839,461 in reward payments, says the Bonneville Power Administration.

One person, the top earner in the program, was paid $48,501 for the 5,579 fish he caught in the Columbia or Snake rivers in 2020.

Northern pikeminnow are voracious eaters, consuming millions of young salmon and steelhead every year.

 

To reduce the pikeminnow population, the Northern Pikeminnow Sport Reward Program pays people who register and then turn in the pikeminnow they catch on the Columbia and Snake rivers.

“When we remove the larger northern pikeminnow, more young salmon and steelhead have a better chance of making it to the ocean and eventually returning to the basin as adults,” said Eric McOmie, BPA program manager.

This year 103,114 pikeminnow were caught and turned in by 2,450 people who registered for the program. They turned in an average of 6.5 fish a day.

That was enough to meet the program’s annual goal to remove 10% to 20% of pikeminnow that are 9 inches or longer in the two rivers in Washington and Oregon.

The top earner didn’t do quite as well as the those in previous years. In 2019 the top earner made $53,000, in 2018 they made $71,000 and in 2017 they made $84,000.

Fewer people than usual participated in the program during the COVID pandemic. To interest more anglers late in the season, the reward was upped to $10 per pikeminnow.

Usually anglers make $5 to $8 per fish, with some specially tagged fish worth $500.

 
Columbia River Pike, Northern Continue...

News Id SourceStampcountry
3601River monsters: NC fishermen catch giant catfishes to break state recordswfmynews22021-08-06US
3602Fish rapidly adapt to pollution thousands of times lethal levelsnewscientist2016-12-08US
3603Southaven man gets award for world-record fishwreg2017-01-23US
3604Scientists can't decide if fish feel painbusinessinsider2017-01-18US
3605Photo of frozen fish in S.D. goes viralkotatv2017-01-16CA
3606Japan fish exorcists’ bizarre ritual hit by animal abuse claimsmalaymail2017-01-13JP
3607US salmon may carry Japanese tapewormCNNwire2017-01-14US
3608Sewage plant upgrade reverses 'feminized' male fishCBC News2017-01-13CA
3609Why the U.S. Government Treats Catfish Unlike Any Other Fishatlasobscura2017-01-13US
3610Not so cold-bloodedspectator2017-01-07JP
3611Banff lake may be drained to stop spread of deadly whirling disease in fishCBC News2016-11-08CA
3612Why conservationists are using facial recognition on fishitnews2016-11-17CA
3613Aklavik man 'jiggles' a whopping 1-metre-long loche fishCBC News2016-11-20CA
3614Allowing bottom trawlers to fish in protected areas like 'bulldozing through a nature reserveitv2021-07-22UK
3615Необычный моряк из МурманскаVK2021-08-21RU
3616Two drone sailboats set sail on Lake Michigan to collect data on fishwoodtv2021-07-28CA
3617From hake to skate: Behind the push to bring 'unknown' fish to New England's dinner tableprovidencejournal2021-07-29US
3618Seven-foot-long fish is 'largest ever seen in Manchester'telegraph2016-12-13UK
3619Eel not be right: Mass fish deaths at lake under investigationstuff2016-12-16NZ
3620New species of fish in Hawaii waters named after Obamahawaii news now2016-12-21US
3621This Russian fisherman has been showing off the nightmarish fish he findsirish examiner2016-12-21RU
3622Holy carp: how fish farming saved a Polish nunnerythe guardian2016-12-24UK
3623Caviar, climate change and a Great Lakes fishmichigan radio2016-12-16US
3624Pollution and climate change threaten fish in Ecuador’s Amazon region Latin America News2021-07-31BR
3625Fish managers say salmon runs ‘could have been worse,’ after underwater video shows heat-stressed salmonNWNews2021-07-28US

220 221 222 144 of [223 - pages.]