|
In 1988 there were the famous fires in Yellowstone
National Park a dramatic but ecologically beneficial event for the area,
but there are side effects of this event that will alter events
forever.
There was so much smoke in the Yellowstone that most of the
White Pelicans that summer on Yellowstone Lake and the Yellowstone
River went elsewhere where the breathing was a little easier
and a lot of them discovered the fishing on the South Fork
of the Snake River and don't want to return to Yellowstone.
It seems that they are big fans of the slot limit of keepable
fish and the catch and release ethics of the South Fork fishermen.
Pelicans eat a horrendous amount of fish. One of the world's
largest birds, it weighs 10-16 pounds, adults consume about
to 4 pounds of food each day, about a quarter of their body
weight in fish every day. In the spring when there aren't any
fishermen on the river, you can see them floating down the
banks of the river about where a fly-fisherman would place
a fly as that is the likeliest place to slurp up a tasty cutthroat
trout.
Cutthroat trout are the only endemic trout to the river.
Decades ago brown trout and rainbow trout were introduced,
and they coexisted in a steady ratio for decades about 80%
cutthroat, 10% brown trout, 10% rainbows, however during the
90's things began to change. The rainbow trout started becoming
more predominant and it is alarming the biologists.
Game and Fish's biologists believe the rainbow trout have
become more prolific and want to kill them where they spawn.
They already kill the rainbows during the fall fish count survey
when they elector-shock the river and the fish float to the
top for counting, or for killing.
I believe the biologists have overlooked the pelican factor
as that is the only environmental dynamic that has changed
for decades. Any fly-fisherman that has been at it for a while
can tell you that if you want to catch rainbow trout fish with
nymph patterns on the bottom of the river if you want to catch
cutthroat trout use surface patterns and fish on top.
Pelicans prefer fishing for surface fish as they can't get
to the fish that feed on the bottom of the river, consequently
their diet consists mostly of cutthroat trout.
The rainbow trout is a great sport fish, and the fly-fishermen
of the South Fork River historically have enjoyed the tremendous
fight they get from their occasional rainbow. The fishermen
also don't want to lose the stupid cutthroat that are easier
to catch. Cutthroats are also more likely than any other trout
to take a dry fly and dry fly fishing is more fun than fishing
on the bottom.
The Pelicans feeding on our cutthroat trout today don't even
know were Yellowstone Lake is and will never return there,
therefor will alter the dynamics of their new home forever
as did the rabbits of Australia.
A common sense solution to achieve our 80%, 10%, 10% ratio
of trout we once had would be to eliminate hungry white pelicans
from their adopted environment instead of destroying our rainbow
trout, and release all cutthroat trout until the ratio of the
last 50 years has been attained.
Open season on pelicans would benefit our river.
Recipes
Roast them like a Goose or smoke them like a turkey or nuke
them like an enemy!
|