Part-Time
11/18/2017 7:27:47 PMsamntrllr
11/19/2017 7:41:53 AMuplandsandpiper
11/19/2017 11:28:43 AMFish Dawg
11/19/2017 1:07:09 PMouttheresomewhere
11/19/2017 1:07:10 PMbut the last one that I can find re- the Kokes is '07, so it's difficult to know what is happening from that source. The last report I've found re- the Kokes
was '09 and that addressed only the plants/releases in Banks - wife and I fish banks several times a year and have yet to catch a Kokanee and we spend
a week to 10 days each time we go. The years before '15 we've had moderate to great success at Roosevelt and have caught them at least 8-9 months of
the year - every time I filet one I always look for signs of reproduction, as well as stomach contents, and not once in all these years have I ever seen
any sign of getting ready to spawn, so I suspect that they must be GMF's (genetically modified fish) AKA triploids, but finding out for sure has been
a dead end - It looks like we're asking more questions and no wise men have an answer - I intend to keep asking though, maybe one of these days
a DFW and/or a Tribal biologist will respond - persistence is omnipotent.
Part-Time
11/19/2017 5:05:47 PMouttheresomewhere
11/21/2017 8:19:02 AMreleased as fry and fingerlings at various locations - since the first law of fish dynamics is "big'uns eat little ones" the Kokanee being
released are at the bottom of the food chain and an easy meal for the big guys - the net pen guys release the 'bows in the spring when
they're about 8-9" and in the fall we have something to fish for - and by then they're pretty good at getting something to eat without
getting caught. Also, part of the work the tribal hatchery performs is to clip the adipose fin, so it looks like you've hit on a a couple of
reasons why things are the way they are - lets hope somebody realizes what is happening and possibly why.