150 miles, 33 days, 1 fish: A rainbow trout's epic journey up the Clark Fork 
By Patrick Reilly US Source: missoulian 5/10/2020
Patrick Reilly
Credit: Wildlife and Parks photo
Rainbow Trout #0068 measures 21 inches and weighs a mere 3.5 pounds. That was enough, it turned out, for a journey up 150 miles of western Montana river.

“That’s the longest migration that I can remember for a trout,” said William Ladd Knotek, a fisheries biologist with Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks.

#0068’s record-setting journey reflected not just the strength of its fins, but years of efforts to monitor fish and ease their passage upstream. “We’re doing lots of small positive things with lots of parts and lots of people kicking in,” he said and cumulatively, it’s having an impact.
 

The first of those positive things #0068 encountered was the fish ladder at NorthWestern Energy’s Thompson Falls hydroelectric dam. Built a decade ago, it’s given passage to an estimated 33,000 fish, said NorthWestern fish biologist Jon Hanson.

“We first encountered the fish when it entered the fish ladder at Thompson Falls,” he said. When it reached the top on March 25, it was fitted with a bright pink “floy tag” atop its dorsal fin with its new number — and a phone number that anglers could use to report its whereabouts.

In recent years, fish-watchers along the Clark Fork River have opted to track fish by tagging them en masse, rather than fitting a few with radio transmitters, Knotek explained.

 
Clark Fork River Trout, Rainbow Continue...

News Id SourceStampcountry
4801Scientists: Evolutionary Origin of Fins, Limbs Discovered; 'This Confirms a Lovely Idea'underwatertimes2006-07-26US
4802Study: Great Lakes' Salmon Failing To Thrive Because of 'Junk Food' DietUnderwatertimes2006-05-21US
4803Warming Swiss rivers threaten fish stocksswissinfo2020-12-31CH
4804European chub named Fish of the Yearswissinfo2021-01-02CH
4805First as Brit Pair's Carp Conquers Japanese Koi Show; 'Our Fish is Superb'Underwatertimes2006-02-04UK
4806Researcher: 'Two-Mouthed' Trout Caused by Injury, Not Geneticsunderwatertimes2006-02-08US
4807Biologists dispute fish farm study that says farmed salmon can coexist with real salmonalaskareport2006-08-03CA
4808Study: Protein Myglobin Key to Common Carp's Ability to Survive with Little OxygenUnderwatertimes2006-06-01UK
4809Skipper nets 'miracle' swordfishbbc2006-08-08UK
4810Consumer Reports: Pregnant Women Should Not Eat Canned Tuna; 'It's Prudent'Underwatertimes2006-06-05US
4811Deep-spied Fish: Atlantic expeditions uncover secret sex life of deep-sea nomadsUnderwatertimes2006-02-21US
4812Research: Evidence of Human-like 'Altruistic' Behavior in Fish Documented; 'Pretty Amazing'Underwatertimes2006-06-22AU
4813Firms pay $62K in reparations for fisheries violationsquamishchief2011-06-24CA
4814Новая стратегия российских рыболовов заставит японцев забыть о Курилах...politpuzzle2021-01-08RU
4815Washington State Angler Lands Massive 405-lb, 7 1/2-foot Halibut; 'I Just Kept Reeling, Reeling, Reeling'underwatertimes2006-08-25US
4816After many years, Utah Lake's carp removal project starting to see some desired resultsDaily Herald 2017-06-19US
4817What to do with 7 million fishphys.org2006-03-23US
4818Beached tuna find 'very unusual'bbc2006-08-30CA
4819Scientists: Some Cod Like It Hot, Some NotUnderwatertimes2006-04-03UK
4820State's freshwater fish tainted, study saysseattlepi2006-03-19US
4821Contaminants May Play Role in Apparent Decline of White Sturgeon in Columbia RiverUnderwatertimes2006-04-06US
4822Fish larvae don't swim well because they lack controlunderwatertimes2006-04-03UK
4823Male Bass Across Region Found to Be Bearing EggsWashington Post2006-09-06US
4824Carp Found to Hold Its Breath for MonthsUnderwatertimes.com2006-04-07NO
4825Scientists worry B.C. hatchery fish threatening endangered wild chinooknanaimobulletin2021-01-02CA

217 218 219 192 of [220 - pages.]