Contact:
Steve Martarano, DFG Office
of Communications, (916) 804-1714
Project Information Line: (530) 832-4754
California Department of Fish & Game
DFG Continues Fish Collection and Cleanup at Lake Davis
After Completing Treatment to Eradicate Northern Pike
PORTOLA – The Department of Fish and Game (DFG) has finished chemically
treating Lake Davis and all tributary streams, officials said. Meanwhile,
DFG workers on Monday continued to collect and sample dead fish from both
the reservoir and those washing ashore.
“We will continue to collect fish and monitor the chemicals as they
break down in the reservoir,” said Ed Pert, the Lake Davis Pike
Eradication Project manager. “The treatment phase of the project, which
began on Sept. 10, went very well. We feel that all of the planning and
preparation that went into this effort has really paid off.”
DFG workers have collected an estimated 41,000 pounds of fish. The
collected fish are bagged, put into a refrigerated truck and then
transported by a Plumas County disposal company to a landfill near Reno,
NV. Of the number of fish collected, about 8 percent sampled have been
northern pike. The vast majority of fish collected – about 75 percent --
have been brown bullheads. Rainbow trout collected have made up less than
1 percent of the total. Other species found in the reservoir include
largemouth bass, golden shiner, and pumpkinseed sunfish. The dead fish
pose no danger to wildlife, such as herons and coyote, which are
scavenging in the area. The water is also safe for wildlife to drink.
Grizzly Valley Dam will remain shut off for up to 45 days to allow the
compounds to degrade naturally in the reservoir. The U.S. Forest Service
closure is still in effect, with check-in points to the project area on
Grizzly Road and the upper end of West Street. Below the immediate dam
area, spring flows and incoming groundwater will help feed Big Grizzly
Creek and provide sufficient habitat for fish in the creek and other
aquatic life.
Post-treatment stocking will begin when Lake Davis is free of any of
the rotenone formulation compounds, which is anticipated to occur this
year before the reservoir freezes over. At that time, DFG plans to stock
about 117,000 sub-catchable and catchable-size rainbow trout in the lake
and tributaries. In Spring 2008, about 900,000 fingerling, sub-catchable,
catchable, and bonus size rainbow trout will be planted.
“We’re expecting fishing to be phenomenal at Lake Davis next year,”
Pert said.
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