The book Montana Outdoors Vol 34 No 2 Mar/apr 2003 was written by author Montana. Dept. of Fish And Game Here you can read free online of Montana Outdoors Vol 34 No 2 Mar/apr 2003 book, rate and share your impressions in comments. If you don't know what to write, just answer the question: Why is Montana Outdoors Vol 34 No 2 Mar/apr 2003 a good or bad book?
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"They started to starve." At first, catch rates rocketed, nearly tripling to 1 . 1 fish per hour as the walleyes hungrily attacked lures and baits. But soon the malnourished fish stopped growing; average size dropped to 14.7 inches. "They were emaciated," says Nelson- Stastny, "with thin, rubbery fillets you couldn't even eat." Despite the high catch rates, anglers weren't interested in fishing for eel-shaped walleyes and went elsewhere. Fishing pres- sure at Oahe dropped by nearly 75 percent, ...from nearly 2 million fishing hours in 1996 to just 540,000 fishing hours in 2000. "Actually, a lot of guys around here headed up to Fort Peck, where they could catch some decent-sized fish," Nelson-Stastny says. Montana fisheries managers aren't the only ones keeping a close eye on the Oahe fiasco. Power says North Dakota doesn't stock Sakakawea in years when natural reproduc- tion appears strong, to avoid producing too many predators. "Every year we carefully watch our stock- ing rates," he says.
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