Fewer fish or fishy science? Industry, biologists differ over Lake Winnipeg walleye 
By Bartley Kives CA Source: CBC News 7/8/2019
Bartley Kives
Scientists fear for Manitoba's most valuable fish. Fishers want their own evidence.
New measures aimed at reducing the walleye catch on Lake Winnipeg have led commercial fishers to stop co-operating with Manitoba on species management and hire their own scientists to combat what they call dubious data.

Responding to what biologists describe as the deteriorating condition of walleye stock in North America's second-largest freshwater commercial fishery, the provincial government started buying back walleye fishing quotas and announced that mesh sizes on gill nets will increase in size next year to allow smaller walleye, sauger and other species to escape and spawn.
 

Members of the fishing industry, who have long been at odds with the biologists, responded with a move the province didn't expect: they voted to dissolve a co-management board with the province, set up their own collective and to procure research they hope will serve as a counter-narrative to the notion walleye — locally known as pickerel — are in trouble.

"We can get our own scientists and have our own research and data," said Einar Sveinson, a fourth-generation fisher based in the lakeside town of Gimli and the president of the upstart Pioneer Commercial Fishers of Manitoba.

His gill nets have been full during the spring commercial fishing season, which comes to a close on Wednesday.

"Overall it's been a terrific season, just like the last 10 or 15 years. There hasn't been any difference, better or worse than any other," he said.
Walleye, lifeblood of the lake

On Lake Winnipeg, commercial fishers head out before dawn every day of the season.

Accompanied by a flock of white pelicans, five Sveinson family boats speed out of Hecla Village Harbour, about 175 kilometres north of Winnipeg. The seven-metre skiffs are small enough to allow gill nets to be hauled up over their bows and pulled along their gunwales, revealing the catch ensnared below the surface of the shallow but enormous lake during the previous 24 hours.

Working as a team, Sveinson and his son Erik pull the net across the boat and carefully free each fish from the mesh before tossing the creatures into one of three sorting bins.

One bucket holds cisco, a freshwater member of the salmon family, better known as tullibee in Manitoba and usually smoked before it's sold to consumers in Gimli or in Winnipeg. A second bin holds a jumble of species, including lake whitefish, yellow perch, goldeye and freshwater drum, the latter better known as sunfish in western Canada.

The third container holds the most valuable species of all. To commercial fishers, anglers and consumers in Manitoba, there is no more desirable fish than walleye, colloquially called pickerel.

 
Lake Winnipeg Walleye Continue...

News Id SourceStampcountry
4976Spring fish kill is natural phenomenonThe Associated Press2019-04-08UK
4977Small rebound for N.L.'s northern cod, but stock still in critical zoneThe Canadian Press 2019-04-02CA
4978Alberta guides encounter exceptional fishing, hospitality while filming documentary in OmanCTV Calgary 2019-03-14CA
4979Considerable number of Wascana Lake fish dead in apparent case of winterkillGlobal News2019-04-04CA
4980Fishing for fun, not food: Study takes stock of recreational fishing impactsYale School of Forestry & Environmental Studies2019-03-19CA
4981Lake Erie walleye quotas up but 'devastating' drop for perch, says commercial fisheryWindsor Star2019-04-02CA
4982Warming lakes affecting fish behaviour in Northwestern Ontariotbnewswatch.com2019-04-01CA
4983Wow! Man hooks 50-pound fish in small lake 2019-02-25US
4984Fraser River sturgeon decline prompts fishing closuresCBC News2019-03-31CA
4985New study helps track 'destructive' giant goldfish threatening Hamilton HarbourCBC News2019-03-29CA
4986Free hunting and fishing in Saskatchewan for Canadian Armed Forces veteransGlobal News2019-03-29CA
4987Blue-green algae confirmed on Nepahwin Lake, Windy Lake: environment ministryCBC News2016-11-01CA
4988Scientists found microplastics inside creatures from the deepest parts of the ocean Business Insider Deutschland2019-03-26DE
4989Yellowknife's Rainbow Coalition fish camp welcoming place to learn art of the catchCBC News2019-03-24CA
4990This cuckoo catfish tricks other fish into raising its head-chomping youngScience2019-03-22 
4991Bad news for Canadian fish: Fewer people are catching themottawa citizen2019-03-19CA
4992Studies shed light on impact of virus on farmed Atlantic salmon in B.C.THE CANADIAN PRESS2019-03-13CA
4993Scientific experts say fish virus poses low risk to Fraser River sockeyeThe Canadian Press2019-03-08CA
4994Study gives scientists unprecedented data on young Atlantic salmon in East Coast rivers The Canadian Press2019-03-15CA
4995Consistent fishing on Arrow LakesTrail Times2019-03-14CA
4996Province rolls out new fish and hunting licence systemCBC News2018-11-28CA
4997Why the Amazon River Can't Be Crossed By Bridgecntraveler2018-04-09BR
499823 Percent of Southern California Fish is Mislabeled 7SAN DIEGO2019-03-09US
4999Fishing for black crappie a Holland River shell gameYorkregion2019-03-11CA
5000A Look at the Rainbow Trout of KamloopsKamloops2019-03-01CA

197 198 199 199 of [200 - pages.]