Edited by Paul Holtan
PO Box 7921
Madison WI 53707
(608) 267-7517
Fax: (608) 264-6293
E-mail address: paul.holtan@wisconsin.gov
Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources
Spotted Muskies to be stocked in Green Bay, Winnebago system
GREEN BAY – Wisconsin’s effort to reintroduce Great Lakes strain
muskellunge to Green Bay and the Winnebago system already has anglers
catching bragging-size muskies, and those popular fisheries will get a
boost this week as nearly 900 large yearling fish are to be stocked at
about a dozen sites.
The musky, also known as “spotted” musky, will be stocked in the Fox,
Menominee, and Peshtigo rivers, in Green Bay, Sturgeon Bay, and Sand Bay.
Little Sturgeon Bay, Suamico, Little Lake Butte des Mortes, and Pensaukee,
Poygan, and Butte Des Morts lakes, according to Mike Donofrio, Department
of Natural Resources fisheries supervisor at Peshtigo.
The fish are 20 to 24 inches long, having grown bigger at the old Wild
Rose State Fish Hatchery while awaiting the green light for stocking. They
were originally planned for stocking at a smaller size in spring 2007, but
were kept at the hatchery longer to assure they were free of a new deadly
fish disease, viral
hemorrhagic septicemia, or VHS.
The discovery of VHS in fish from the Lake Winnebago system, Green Bay
and Lake Michigan in May led the Department of Natural Resources to halt
stocking while it reassessed the risk of transmitting the disease. It also
led the state Department of Agriculture, Trade and Consumer Protection to
quarantine three state fish hatcheries, including the old Wild Rose
facility, because they had received eggs or fish from waters connected to
where VHS had been detected.
Subsequent tests of fish for stocking, hatchery water supplies and
broodstock have all been negative for VHS and stocking has continued from
the three facilities and other DNR hatcheries after meeting new
requirements imposed by DNR and triggered by the quarantine to assure the
disease was not spread.
DNR, with support from local fishing clubs, launched efforts to
reintroduce the Great Lakes strain muskellunge into Green Bay in 1989 and
later expanded that effort into the Winnebago system, which is in the same
basin. The fish have grown very fast in the favorable conditions of those
large waters.
Great Lakes strain muskellunge are native to Green Bay and Lake
Winnebago, but the fish were extirpated in the bay during the mid-1900s by
over-fishing, pollution, habitat degradation, and interactions with exotic
species. Passage and enforcement of the Clean Water Act starting in the
early 1970s, followed by targeted clean up efforts in Green Bay, greatly
improved water quality and allowed DNR to start the reintroduction effort,
Donofrio says.
Fertilized muskellunge eggs originally from Michigan were hatched and
raised at the Wild Rose State Fish Hatchery and stocked out from 1989
through this fall at sites including the Fox, Menominee, and Peshtigo
rivers, Little Sturgeon and Sturgeon bays, Little Lake Butte des Mortes,
Green Bay and the Winnebago system.
DNR electrofishing and fyke nets surveys have revealed that the
reintroduced fish mature up to two years later than muskellunge in some
inland Wisconsin lakes but grow faster than muskellunge sampled in eight
lakes in Michigan, Minnesota, and Wisconsin. The muskellunge also achieve
a more plump body size at a given length compared to most muskellunge
sampled elsewhere throughout their range, Donofrio says.
Anglers are now reporting catching large fish in the 45- to 50-inch
range, and one angler reported to wardens he caught a fish he measured at
55 7/8 inches with a girth of 33 inches. A fall fishing tournament for the
Great Lakes strain musky is set for this weekend in Green Bay. In only its
second year, tournament registration has more than tripled from the
inaugural year and is up to 50 anglers, Donofrio says.
FOR MORE INFORMATION CONTACT: Mike Donofrio (715) 582-5050
Click Here To Return To The
Previous Page