Iowa Sportsmen’s Radio Hour

Stars On “The Iowa Sportsman” – Tonight

Stars_ice_girls_ron_michael There are plenty of reasons to be an Iowa Stars Hockey Fan…and tonight on the other radio show I do, The Iowa Sportsman we’ll talk hockey!  (This was simply an excuse for me to use this photo of some friends at a game!)

The Iowa Sportsman Radio Hour is heard each Monday evening at 7 only on 98.3 WOW-FM here in the Des Moines Market.  If you want to listen from wherever you might live or work you can always listen live using your PC.

The Iowa Sportsmans Radio Hour is the broadcast version of The Iowa Sportsman Magazine and something I’ve been doing for our client for about 15 months.  I’m usually joined by my co-host Thomas Allen…but Thomas is out tonight.  So….I get to choose the topic:

Stars_faceoff Iowa Stars Hockey!  And before you scratch your head and wonder what the heck that has to do with hunting, fishing, cross country skiing, or noodling.  (Someday we’ll have to talk about that!)  The answer is pretty simple:  It’s all Iowa…and it’s a great, tough, fast moving sport that many Iowa kids learn about on lakes and ponds (when they are not ice fishing!).

Our guest tonight is the Assistant Coach of the Iowa Stars, Paul Jerrad_paul Jerrard.  Paul skated with the New York Rangers and the Minnesota North Stars of the NHL and was a member of the AHL Calder Cup Winning Hershey Bears in 1997.  Coach Jerrard is a native of Winnipeg, Manitoba and was hired as the assistant coach of the Iowa Stars in June of 2005.

We’ll spend most of the hour with Coach Jerrard and you’re invited to take part.

Fish Estrogen Birth Control

Birth control for fish
A huge experiment that involved deliberately polluting an entire lake with synthetic oestrogen has given scientists invaluable data on what the chemical is doing to the environment

I’m generally quite skeptical about research on trace levels of human-made chemicals in the environment because often the claims are not backed up by the evidence. An increase in levels of some oestrogen-mimicking plastic is correlated with a drop in the population of some fish and we jump to the conclusion that one caused the other. The difficulty is that the experiments you would want to do to nail the issue are so damned hard.

So hats off to Dr Karen Kidd at the University of New Brunswick in Canada for putting together the most impressive experiment in this field I’ve ever seen. Some might question the wisdom of deliberately polluting an entire lake with synthetic oestrogen for three years, but the upshot is some really solid scientific evidence.

It turns out the synthetic oestrogens excreted by women taking the birth-control pill do have a dramatic effect on some fish. Kidd presented her results to the American Association for the Advancement of Science annual meeting in Boston on Saturday.

The team carried out the work in an area of 58 designated research lakes in northwest Ontario. These lakes are unpolluted and free of human activities such as watersports and fishing. From 1999 to 2000 the team built up a comprehensive picture of the ecology of “lake 260? by catching fish and invertebrates.

From 2001 to 2003, they added synthetic oestrogen to the lake by pumping it from the back of a boat three times a week. The idea was to create oestrogen levels in the lake similar to those recorded in lakes and rivers near towns and cities that receive treated sewage.

They then monitored the lake until 2006 and at the same time carried out similar tests on nearby lakes that had not been laced with oestrogen. Any changes that only happened in lake 260 could then be linked to the oestrogen addition and not natural variation.

The results? There was no effect on the bacteria, algae or invertebrates, but a dramatic effect on some fish species. That tells the scientists that, as expected, estrogen affects the fish directly and not via a lower level in the food chain.

In fathead minnows, males began producing an egg protein called vitellogenin (normally predominantly found in females) at 9,000 times the usual rate. In addition, their reproductive development almost came to a standstill. “There was complete disintegration of the testes,” said Kidd. “We lost over 90% of the individuals in the lake.” The story was similar, although slightly less dramatic, in another species, the pearl dace.

In a third species, the predatory lake trout, there was a 10,000-fold increase in vitellogenin in males, but strangely no disruption to reproduction. The species did suffer a 30% decline, though, probably due to a fall in the number of prey in the lake.

The good news is that three years after the team stopped adding estrogen, the fish populations have recovered. So the effects of estrogen pollution can be reversed. There is now a strong case for better sewage treatment to break down synthetic estrogen before they make it into the environment.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/science/blog/2008/feb/17/imgenerallyquitescepticala

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Fishing Experts

Fishing expert Dave Csanda will present two topics at the 2008 Northland Outdoors Sportshow to help people improve their confidence in fishing for smallmouth bass and walleyes. At 1 p.m. on Feb 23 and Feb. 24 Csanda will talk about fishing for walleye in shallow water. Because many people like to fish for walleye in deep, fairly snag free waters with live bait rigging, this seminar features alternative tactics to get people comfortable fishing in shallow areas too.

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geese and elusive walleye,canada

And there was our friend and professional guide Tom “Perch” Maynard in the middle, balancing the tasks of making us both happy while also accomplishing his personal mission of scouting for the looming fishing season.

We had set out on the New River in Perch’s big raft on this last-gasp cast-and-blast adventure about 8 a.m., with a boatload of fishing rods, shotguns and high hopes.

First, we took up our walleye-fishing station below Fosters Falls.

This is not a secret spot.

Before the park facility opened, four rigs were queued behind the locked gate, and we were first in line only because we arrived nearly an hour-and-a-half early.

The Department of Game and Inland Fisheries has established an aggressive management program for the river’s walleyes. Each winter biologists use electroshock gear to borrow some fish before the spawn, collecting eggs and milt in a hatchery, then later stocking the river with the resulting tiny walleyes.

While the river has been producing lots of fish under 20 inches the past few years, keeper fish over 20 inches are relatively rare.

A tagging element has been added to the program this year. Each returned tag will net the lucky angler a $20 reward.

It was nice to hope for a tag, but Perch mostly just wanted to get a feel for the fishery before he starts taking clients of his New River Angler guide business on the stretch.

As Chuck, a professor of environmental biology at Virginia Tech, longingly eyed a pair of geese on the shoreline, Perch and I pitched small jigs.

The anglers in other boats used their preferred methods, including the popular technique of dunking live minnows.

Nothing was working so we didn’t stay long, heading off in search of geese and more fishing spots.

Friday was the final day of the Canada goose season and Perch and Chuck were hoping to fare better than they had on opening day in September, when they floated two stretches of the New and saw few birds.

They would do a lot better.

Not far down the river we rounded a bend and surprised a good bunch of Canadas on the water.

Chuck and I had at them and managed to knock down four, a good start.

Then it was back to fishing.

In a fairly slow run, I felt a tap on my jig and I set the hook into something big and strong.

“Maybe it’s a 10-pound walleye,” Perch said, excitedly.

My guess was a big flathead catfish. We were both wrong.

When I finally got the fish close to the boat we could see that it was a large carp, which had been foul-hooked behind the dorsal fin.

It wasn’t like we were in a hurry so I asked Perch if I could try to land the thing. Eventually I did, and it weighed 18.1 pounds. That’s a lifetime best, albeit one with a big asterisk because of the foul hooking.

Soon Perch landed the day’s first walleye, a 16-incher.

A while later something bumped my jerkbait and I saw the golden flash of a walleye in the current. It was undersized, but I couldn’t have been happier to finally get that monkey off my back after several previous failures.

The geese kept us busy, too.

Spooked after months of hunting pressure, most would fly before we got within range, but we got enough shots to come close to filling our limit.

As temperatures climbed, Perch said he wouldn’t be surprised if we hooked a smallmouth, and not much later we both saw a nice one nip at his plug without getting hooked.

I got luckier when something tapped my jerkbait in a bouldery run.

When the strong fish got close to the raft it flashed broadside in the current and I could see that I was fast to what was possibly the biggest smallmouth of my life.

Unfortunately the big bass was hooked precariously to the last treble on the plug.

http://www.roanoke.com/outdoors/wb/151183

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Bass Fishing Podcast

David Chong’s BassTalk seminar at Fishing World is all about hard jerk baits.

Episode Resources

Ripple Outdoors

Episode Credits

Voice by Chuck Lefleur
Music by Jon Schmidt from the Podsafe Music Network

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Winter shows offer good deals, great memories

fishing, hunting or gun show happening or coming soon to the area.

Personally, this is one of my favorite times of the year. The reason that I say that is it’s the time of the year for me when I spend quite a bit of time on the road traveling from sport show to sport show all across this great land of ours.

Presenting seminars on outdoors related subjects such as fishing and hunting is something that I have done for many years and really enjoy doing.

Getting to meet old friends that I may have met years ago at a show is really great. Also, I get to spend some time with my other outdoor writer friends who tour the seminar circuit this time of the year themselves. These shows give us a chance to spend some time together swapping stories and adventures that we have experienced the past season. It also gives us a chance to plan our trips together for the upcoming year.

For you sportsmen out there, going to a sport show is a chance to shake off the cobwebs of the long winter season and spend a day engulfed in the latest products that are available for your particular sport. Whatever is may be, fishing, hunting, camping or boating, you can bet that you will find them represented at most sport shows.

What’s nice about attending one of these shows is that you can get a chance to try some of these new products hands-on before you decide to buy them. This is nice because it gives you a chance to get a feeling if you really like it or not. This can really help you make that decision before laying out that cash.

Another great aspect of sports shows is being able to get a chance to search out a good vacation sight for the upcoming season. You will find that many resorts and lodges from all over the United States and Canada will have booths set up at these shows so that you can find out information about what they offer.

I know many anglers that go to Canada fishing during the warm weather months will actually book their vacations at some of these shows. By doing this, they help insure that they will get the dates they want. Also, you can get some great sport show packages that these lodges offer that can save you some extra bucks.

One thing that I want to mention is that when talking to one of these lodge operators, do not be afraid to ask all kinds of questions. Ask about the fishing, the facilities, what’s actually included in the trip package. Also, make it a point to ask about their cancellation policy if something should come up where you could not make the trip.

See what kind of meal plans they offer, if any, and make sure all pricing is inclusive. You don’t want to find out later that there are hidden charges in the trip you never knew about.

If you do decide to book a trip, get everything in writing. If you find that the lodge will not do this for you, move on and find one that will.

Another highlight of spending the day at a sports show is the food that is usually available. At most of your larger shows, you will be able to find everything from homemade moose jerky to Indian smoked fish, all within a just few feet of each other. Don’t be surprised at some of the more exotic foods that you may find there also.

Over the years, at the many sports shows I attend, I have tasted the likes of lion stew and seafoods like broiled escargot, just to mention a few. Be open-minded when you sample these foods. Don’t have a negative attitude until you taste it. You just might find something you really like the taste of. Again, the food samples at these shows are usually quite plentiful so enjoy yourself.

One of my personal favorites of sport show season is the free seminars you can attend. For both fisherman and hunters and boaters, these seminars that are given by professional folks in the know about their particular sport can be very educational as well as enjoyable. You will find that most of your quality sport shows will offer some type of a seminar schedule that usually occurs every day of the show’s run.

Over the many years that I have been doing seminars at shows all across the country and also in Canada, my fondest memories are of all the wonderful people that I have met.

I truly enjoy when I get a chance to speak with someone who attended one of my seminars in past years and they make it a point to stop by and say hello. In fact, at many shows I do I’ll look for faces in the audience that I can recognize from the past. Spotting one, I’ll make a mental note to make time after the show and once again say hello. It’s really neat to talk with these folks year after year and share some memories. Many of those youngsters are now grown young adults. It’s great to see them.

When you head out to one of these sport shows, keep in mind that it is a place where the whole family can have a good time. Whatever the outdoors person in your family enjoys, it’s a good bet they will find it. This is especially true of your bigger sport shows.

So now’s the time my friends to start circling those ads you see in the newspapers and magazines advertising an upcoming sport show. For the next few months or so you can get out and enjoy the time of your life. You’ll also get those juices flowing as we head closer to another spring in the outdoors.

http://www.thonline.com/article.cfm?id=191165

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Catch Those Big Fish

“Angling records can pinpoint some of the best waters to fish,” Dilts said, “but a certain amount of luck and skill is required to catch a big fish. We offer programs for catch-and-keep and catch-and-release fishing.”

What follows is based on the DNR’s 2007 catch-and-keep category. Study this information, and try fishing some new spots. Detailed information about this program is found in the annual Michigan Fishing Guide.

Five hundred Master Angler fish were caught and kept in 2007. The listings below will detail the fish species, the state record in pounds and ounces and year it was caught, the minimum weight required for a Master Angler award patch, the 2007 record (by weight), the angler’s name, his/her hometown, where he/she was fishing and in which county.

Atlantic Salmon

The 1981 record weighed 32.62 pounds, was 41 inches long, and the minimum requirement for a Master Angler Award is 12 pounds.

Only one fish was recorded last year, and Paul Barriger of Grand Blanc caught a 12.69 fish in Lake Huron off Chippewa County while trolling.

Black Buffalo

The 2004 state record weighed 33.25 pounds, was 36.50 inches long, and the minimum weight for this species is 10 pounds.

Again, only one fish was entered, and it was caught by Anthony Starks of Sparta after he landed a 28.81-pounder from the Grand River In Ottawa County while bow fishing.

Black Crappie

The 1947 state record weighed 4.12 pounds. The minimum weight now is 1.75 pounds.

The 2007 record 3.19-pound black crappie was caught by Julius Bockheim of Byron Center. He caught it in Blodgett Lake in Kent County. Key waters to try are Henderson Lake in Ogemaw County — because it produced two large fish last year — and Notawa Lake in Calhoun County, which produced two trophies.

Bluegill

The 1983 state record weighed 2.75 pounds, and was 13.75 inches long. The current minimum entry weight for this species is one pound.

Ronald May of Grant caught his 1.88-pound ‘gill while fishing Croton Pond on the Muskegon River In Newaygo County. Other good bets include Hodenpyl Pond in Wexford County and AuSable Lake in Ogemaw County.

Bowfin

The 1981 state record weighed 14 pounds, was 35 inches long, and the minimum weight for recognition is seven pounds.

Donovan Kirkendall of Mattawan used a bow and arrow to take a 10-pound bowfin from Eagle Lake in Allegan County. Eagle Lake produced five big fish, Manistee Lake at Manistee gave up two and the Maple River in Gratiot County produced two Master Angler fish.

Brook Trout

The 1996 record fish weighed 9.50 pounds, was 28.10 inches long, and the minimum weight now is two pounds.

Madison Grandas of Flushing caught a 3.75-pound brookie from the Maple River in Emmet County. Other solid hotspots include Keweenaw Bay on Lake Superior (three fish) and Neds Lake in Schoolcraft County.

Brown Bullhead

The 1989 record weighed 3.62 pounds, was 17.50 inches long, and the minimum weight requirement for this species is 1.50 pounds.

Ryan Mathews of Jackson caught his 2007 record weighing 1.94 pounds while fishing with a minnow in Frenchman Lake in Chippewa County. One other big fish was caught here, and anglers also can try Lake Cadillac at Cadillac.

Brown Trout

A new 2007 record brown weighed 36.81 pounds, and was 43 inches long. It is the third largest in North America. The minimum weight is 16 pounds.

Casey Richey of Frankfort caught his all-time state record while trolling a Rapala on Lake Michigan at Frankfort on Mother’s Day. Other top bets are Lake Michigan near Manistee and Frankfort, Lake Huron near Rogers City and the West Arm of Grand Traverse Bay near Traverse City.

Burbot

The 1980 state record weighed 18.25 pounds, was 40 inches long, and the minimum weight requirement is five pounds.

The top burbot for 2007 was taken by Edward Kessel of Christmas, and his fish weighed 14.75 pounds. He caught it in Lake Superior off Alger County while ice fishing. The closest good bets for burbot are both arms of Grand Traverse Bay and Crystal Lake at Beulah. The upper Great Lakes are good.

Channel Catfish

The 1964 state record weighed 40 pounds, was 41.50 inches long, and the minimum weight in the catch-and-release category is eight pounds.

Anthony Grochowski of Herron was drift fishing with a crawler harness on Grand Lake in Presque Isle County when he landed a 21.44-pound catfish. Lake St. Clair led this category with four entries followed by Saginaw Bay with three entries.

Common Carp

The 1974 state record weighed 61.50 pounds, was 47.50 inches long, and the current minimum weight is 20 pounds.

Douglas Depcinski of Bay City caught the largest 2007 carp, and it weighed 32 pounds. It was caught while trolling on Saginaw Bay. Other hotspots like Wixom Lake produced six entries last year. Platte Lake also is good.

Flathead Catfish

The 1943 state record weighed 47.50 pounds, was 44 inches long, and the current minimum weight is 10 pounds.

Muskegon Lake at Muskegon produced a 36.50-pound fish for Johnny Hayes of Grand Rapids. The Grand, Muskegon and St. Joseph rivers produced several Master Angler award fish last year.

Freshwater Drum

The state record fish was caught in 1973, and weighed 26 pounds, was 37.50 inches long, and the minimum weight for entry is seven pounds.

Kenneth Clark of Whitehall was casting on White Lake in Muskegon County when he hooked and landed the 21.63-pound fish. Other good places to try are Platte Lake in Benzie County, Hamlin Lake at Ludington, Spring Lake in Ottawa County, and Lake St. Clair in Macomb County.

Green Sunfish

The 1990 state record weighed 1.53 pounds, was 10 inches long, and the minimum weight requirement is 0.75 pound.

Daniel Catto of Cadillac caught his 0.90-pound fish while casting with a worm on “No Name Lake” in Midland County. The only other green sunfish came from the Grand River in Ottawa County.

Lake Herring

The record for this species was caught in 1992, and weighed 5.40 pounds, was 25 inches long, and the minimum weight for entry is 2.50 pounds.

Liam Dearlove of Flushing trolled Grand Traverse Bay at Traverse City when he hooked a 3.56-pound herring on a spoon. It was the sole entry.

Lake Trout

The state record for this species was set in 1997 with a 61.50-pound fish that was 49 inches long, and minimum entry weight is 18 pounds.

Donita Frasier of AuTrain was trolling Lake Superior off Alger County when she caught a 41.40-pounder. Lake Superior provided seven entries, and Higgins Lake in Roscommon County and Green Lake in Grand Traverse County and Lake Charlevoix at Charlevoix each produced a big fish.

Lake Whitefish

The 1993 state record weighed 14.28 pounds, was 31.75 inches long, and the minimum weight restriction is six pounds.

Only two fish were entered, and Cecil Wares of Tawas City caught his 7.75-pound fish on a minnow while fishing Tawas Bay. The other fish came from the East Arm of Grand Traverse Bay.

Largemouth Bass

The 1959 state record weighed 11.94 pounds, was 26 inches long, and the minimum entry weight now is six pounds.

Michael Eisenberg of Mattawan caught his trophy 8.12-pound fish on Paw Paw Lake in Van Buren County while casting a spinner. Other good spots are Glovers Lake in Manistee County and Doc and Tom Lake near Clare.

Longnose Gar

The 1995 state record was for a fishing that weighed 18 pounds and was 63 inches. The minimum weight to qualify is five pounds.

Jeffrey Haddix of Stanton used a bow and arrow to take the largest specimen in 2007. It weighed 8.08 pounds, Dickinson Lake in Montcalm County. Other good bets are Baseline Lake in Allegan County and Platte Lake in Benzie County.

Longnose Sucker

The 1986 state record weighed 6.88 pounds, was 22.50 inches, and the minimum weight for Master Angler status is two pounds.

Jack Powell of Cadillac caught the largest (and only entry) on worms from the Manistee River in Manistee County. It weighed 3 pounds.

Great Lakes Muskellunge

The 1984 state record weighed 48 pounds, and the minimum weight entry for this species is 20 pounds.

Mark Dawkins of Clawson caught his 37.55-pound fish while trolling Lake St. Clair in Macomb County. The two best bets for big fish are Lake St. Clair in Macomb County and the Black River in Cheboygan County. Three fish taken from the Black River were taken with a spear.

Northern Muskellunge

The state record for this trophy is 49.75 pounds, and it was 51 inches long, and the minimum weight requirement is 20 pounds.

Kenneth Rowe of Gladwin caught a 33-pound fish from Secord Lake in Gladwin County on a minnow while ice fishing. Sanford Lake in Midland County and Upper Crooked Lake in Barry County gave up big fish.

Northern Pike

The 1961 state record pike weighed 39 pounds, was 51.50 inches, and the minimum weight requirement for entering a fish is 18 pounds.

Brian Frederick of Albion caught his 25.30 pike while ice fishing with a shiner minnow on Winnipeg Lake in Calhoun County. Other top spots for big pike are the Dead River in Marquette County and Pere Marquette Lake in Mason County. Muskegon Lake is another great spot for big fish.

Pumpkinseed

The 2004 state record weighed 1.35 pounds, measured 11 inches, and 0.75 pounds is a minimum weight to enter this species.

Kyleigh Nelson of Linwood caught the state’s largest in 2007 with a 1.25-pound fish while still-fishing George Lake in Ogemaw County. George Lake seems the best spot although Shear Lake in Oscoda County is good.

Quillback

The 2000 state record for this rather obscure species is eight pounds, was 25.25 inches long, and the minimum requirement is three pounds.

Only one specimen was entered, and Kevin Zoulek of Shelby took his 6.31-pound fish from Stony Lake in Oceana County. It was shot with a bow.

Rainbow Trout

The 1975 state record was 26.50 pounds, was 39.50 inches in length, and the minimum weight is 17 pounds.

Faina Shor of Farmington Hills caught the only entry in this category, and it weighed 17.25 pounds. It was caught on Lake Michigan off Berrien County.

Redear Sunfish

The 2002 state record weighed 1.97 pounds, was 12.75 inches long, and the minimum weight for entry is one pound.

James Williams of Morenci caught his 2007 record that weighed 1.75 pounds from Boots Lake in Hillsdale County. Also good are Nottawa Lake in Calhoun County or Baw Beese Lake in Hillsdale County.

Redhorse

The state-record redhorse was caught in 1991, and it weighed 12.89 pounds and was 29.25 inches long. The minimum weight is four pounds.

Crystal Feldpausch of Riverdale caught a 2.75-pounder while still-fishing with a worm on the Chippewa River in Isabella County. Other spots are the Pere Marquette River in Mason County and the St. Clair River in St. Clair County.

Rock Bass

The 1963 state record weighted 3.62 pounds, was 20 inches long, and the minimum weight requirement is one pound.

Cody Burns of Alpena caught his 2007 record of 2.75 pounds while fishing Shupac Lake in Crawford County. Other solid choices are Lake Leelanau in Leelanau County, Green Lake in Grand Traverse County, and Torch Lake in Antrim County.

Round Whitefish (Menominee)

The 1992 state record weighed 4.06 pounds, measured 21.50 inches, and the minimum weight is one pound.

Marc Soles of Scottville caught his 2.25-pound trophy while still-fishing on Lake Michigan off Mason County. Lake Huron and Lake Michigan produced all the fish.

Smallmouth Bass

The oldest state record (1906) weighed 9.25 pounds, measured 27.25 pounds, and the minimum weight for an entry now is five pounds.

Thomas Tiethof of Zeeland caught his 7.25-pound smallie from Lake Skegemog in Kalkaska County. Other solid choices are Lake St. Clair in Macomb and St. Clair counties, Boardman River and Grand Traverse Bay in Grand Traverse County, and Elk River in Antrim County.

Splake

The 2004 state record weighed 17.50 pounds, was 34.50 inches long, and the minimum entry weight is six pounds.

Holly Wirgau of Rogers City caught the only entry in this category — a fish weighing 8.50 pounds — from Thumb (Louise) Lake in Charlevoix County. It is the best spot in the state for this species.

Walleye

The 1951 state record weighed 17.19 pounds, was 35 inches long, and the minimum weight for this species is 11 pounds.

Michael Frisco of Coloma caught the state’s best walleye weighing 15.47 pounds while fishing the St. Joseph River in Berrien County. Other hotspots to try are Muskegon Lake and River in Muskegon County, Saginaw River in Saginaw County and Manistee Lake in Manistee County.

White Crappie

The state record was caught in 2000, and it weighed 3.39 pounds and was 19.50 inches long. The minimum entry weight is 1.75 pounds.

Larry Fath of Rhodes caught the only Master Angler specimen. It weighed 2.61 pounds, and was caught in Wixom Lake in Gladwin County.

White Sucker

The 1982 state record weighed 7.19 pounds. It was 28 inches long, and the minimum weight for this game fish is three pounds.

The top fish for the 2007 season was a 5.80-pounder caught by Larry Kilpatrick of Levering while fishing the Carp River in Emmet County. Other spots to try include the Manistee River in Kalkaska County and the Rifle River in Arenac County.

Yellow Bullhead

The largest specimen was caught in 2003, and it weighed 3.60 pounds and measured 26.80 inches. The minimum weight for entering is 1.50 pounds.

David Vandyke of Grand Rapids caught his 2.25-pound fish from Pickerel Lake in Newaygo County. Coldwater Lake In Isabella County and Dickerson Lake in Montcalm County are good spots to fish.

http://www.record-eagle.com/sports/local_story_048094811.html/resources_printstory

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Boat Show

There were guides and outfitters from all over North America, including one from Canada called Pine Cliff Lodge. They offer fishing for northern pike, lake trout, walleye, smallmouth and yellow perch. They also offer hunting trips for bear, moose and grouse – and their prices are really amazing.

There were also quite a few tackle vendors on site. I bought three Strike King Series 3 crankbaits for $10 – just gearing up for the upcoming white bass run on Sardis Lake. I also bought three cards of crappie jigs from a new Memphis company called Uncle Ted’s Lures.

Any of you who are into crappie fishing know how hard it is to find decent jigs these days. But these jigs from Uncle Ted’s Lures actually look pretty good. If the wind ever stops blowing, I might get a chance to try them.

As always, there were plenty of boats and sea-doos at the show – and lots and lots of people. It was one of the more well-attended shows I can remember.

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Province’s Métis set stage for legal showdown over hunting rights

When Wayne Hadley shot a moose out of season near Cochrane this winter, he says he was making a stand for Métis rights — like his ancestors who fought alongside Louis Riel.

Hadley, whose great-great-grandfather and great-grandfather fought in the Riel Rebellion, shot the moose with a 30.30 rifle during one of six hunts staged by the Métis Nation of Alberta.

“I guess I owed it to them to keep on with the rebellion — at least until we win something,” said the 58-year-old Valleyview businessman.

Since the Métis began the hunts last fall near Pincher Creek, Cypress Hills, Hinton, House River, Cochrane and Suffield, six hunters have been charged and three deer, two moose and an antelope have been seized.

Métis Nation of Alberta president Audrey Poitras says the aim of the campaign, which has now been suspended, is to get the issue of Métis hunting before the courts and force the Alberta government to resume negotiations on a new Métis “harvesting agreement.”

She said she hopes a new government will move quickly after the March 3 election to avoid long and costly litigation.

“I am hoping that once the election is over the premier will see fit to sit down and look at why we don’t have an agreement in place.”

Métis say they are fighting for Constitutional rights upheld by the Supreme Court of Canada in the Powley decision.

In that ruling, the court directed governments to accommodate Métis hunting and fishing for food in 2003, but Alberta Métis claim the province is limiting their rights with a narrow interpretation of the ruling.

Poitras says Alberta’s 66,000 Métis view the issue as a rallying point and are standing up to fight for rights the province is denying them.

“It is more than just about hunting,” she said. “It’s about the recognition of the rights of a people.”

Alberta was initially one of the first provinces to react to the court ruling, which was based on a case led by Ontario Métis moose hunters named Steve and Roddy Powley. The Ralph Klein Conservative government negotiated an interim agreement in 2004 enabling Métis to hunt anywhere in the province for food.

But the deal was scrapped by his successor Ed Stelmach in the wake of criticism from hunting and conservation groups and the failure of the Métis and government officials to reach a new deal before a 90-day deadline set by the province last year.

Métis are now restricted from hunting out of season, except around specific communities with historical and contemporary Métis links.

The new interpretation of the rules gives the province the authority to determine who is Métis. It essentially bans Métis from sustenance hunting or fishing anywhere in the southern half of the province.

“Our Constitution says we have the right to hunt for food and the province gave us our rights and we never abused them, but they took them away for no apparent reason,” Hadley said.

“Even though the government of Canada says we’re entitled to these rights, the government of Alberta refuses to recognize them.”

See HUNT / A2

David Ealey, a spokesman for Sustainable Resource Development, said the two sides are in “disagreement about what the rules are under Powley.”

“We’re quite willing as a government to carry forward with negotiations with the Metis organizations, but right now there has not been anything active,” he said. “At the moment there wouldn’t be anything occurring because we’re in an election.”

But Poitras contends there was no reason to scrap the initial agreement because claims some Metis were abusing the privilege were unfounded.

“It worked well for 2 1/2 years. What we should have been doing was building on it – not tossing it out.”

She puts the blame for the conflict on Sustainable Resource Minister Ted Morton, who campaigned during his bid for the Tory party leadership on a promise to scrap the deal if he won the contest.

Although Morton lost the leadership bid, Stelmach appointed him to a cabinet post that placed responsibility for the deal under his control, although his department maintains it was not his decision alone.

Robert Lee, manager of justice issues for the Metis Nation of Alberta, says the organization has hired Jean Teillet and Jason Madden, the lawyers who defended the Powleys, to represent hunters who have been charged.

Nathalie Kermoal, a native studies professor at the University of Alberta, says the court may take a dim view of the Alberta government’s arbitrary imposition of the new rules when a higher court made it clear there must be negotiations with Metis people.

“You have to negotiate with the people and come up with something they can agree on, but not impose things,” she said. “That’s the difference between the interim agreement, where there was consultation, and with what the Stelmach government has come up with.”

Kermoal says its also a matter of record that Metis hunted in southern and central Alberta although that position has been challenged by southern First Nations who claim it violates their treaties.

“When you look at Metis culture and how they lived in historical times, there was so much mobility among the people. They would move around many places for different reasons and a lot of it had to do with hunting.”

Hunting groups say they are primarily concerned that safety and conservation issues are addressed in a new deal.

Kelly Semple, executive director of Hunting For Tomorrow, said her coalition of hunting groups fears unregulated hunting will make it more difficult for the province to manage wildlife.

http://www.canada.com/edmontonjournal/story.html?id=2528542d-f78e-4bca-b4f9-87fbd14dfe10&

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Certainly Not a Frog at Lake Manitoba Narrows

A tiny frog species thought by many experts to be extinct has been rediscovered alive and well in a remote area of Australia’s tropical north, researchers said Thursday.

The 1.5 inch-long Armoured Mistfrog had not been seen since 1991, and many experts assumed it had been wiped out by a devastating fungus that struck northern Queensland state.

But two months ago, a doctoral student at James Cook University in Townsville conducting research on another frog species in Queensland stumbled across what appeared to be several Armoured Mistfrogs in a creek, said professor Ross Alford, head of a research team on threatened frogs at the university.

Conrad Hoskin, a researcher at The Australian National University in Canberra who has been studying the evolutionary biology of north Queensland frogs for the past 10 years, conducted DNA tests on tissue samples from the frogs and determined they were the elusive Armoured Mistfrog.

Alford’s group got the results on Wednesday. A spokeswoman for the Queensland Environmental Protection Agency also confirmed Hoskin’s findings.

“A lot of us were starting to believe it had gone extinct, so to discover it now is amazing,” Hoskin said. “It means some of the other species that are missing could potentially just be hidden away along some of the streams up there.”

Craig Franklin, a zoology professor at The University of Queensland who studies frogs, said the Mistfrog’s rediscovery was exciting.

“It’s very significant,” Franklin said. “We’ve lost so many frog species in Australia … Hopefully it’s a population that’s making a comeback.”

The light brown frogs, with dark brown spots, congregate in areas with fast-flowing water. So far, between 30 and 40 have been found.

The chytrid fungus was blamed for decimating frog populations worldwide, including seven species in Queensland’s tropics between the late 1980s and early 1990s.

Armoured Mistfrogs had been classified as critically endangered rather than extinct, but most researchers believed they had died out from the disease, Alford said.

Most of the Armoured Mistfrogs that Alford’s group has found are infected with the fungus, but the disease does not appear to be making them sick, he said.

Alford and his team plan to study the creatures to try and determine how they managed to coexist with the fungus, in a bid to aid future conservation and management of vulnerable frogs.

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Wildlife Viewing

There are any of a number of factors which can help promote wildlife viewing as a eco , ” green” and general target niche tourist product to enhance tourist focus and the growth of raw tourism to the Lake Manitoba Interlake and specifically the Lake Manitoba Narrows regions.

First for the bald-eagles in the regions, their awareness should be pointed out , promoted .  Capitalize on this resource.  Wildlife viewing enthusiasts will seek out and travel long distances in order to view this magnificent animal.  Large conspicious mammals are a draw.  Conservation offices can be best polled to verify the general geographic locations of moose, elk ,deer , bison and other large forest and woodlands creatures.   In addition stress the large areas of dominant migratory concentration sites to see any of a variety of large numbers of migratory birds.     Along with this are good examples of biomes ( manitoba tundra , boreal forests , prairies etc.)  which adds further bulk and depth to the values of the eco tourist experiences in the Lake Manitoba Interlake region with any number of lodges.   Lastly make good use of lakes , wetlands and rivers - in the lake manitoba narrows catchment areas to add further dimensions to the overall interest and travel memories of green and eco wildlife viewing tourists and visitors.

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Gov. Sarah Palin – Polar Bears

Sarah Palin listens as John McCain delivers a speech during the Clinton Global Initiative annual meeting in New York. Photograph: Jason DeCrow/AP

The Republican Sarah Palin and her officials in the Alaskan state government drew on the work of at least six scientists known to be sceptical about the dangers and causes of global warming, to back efforts to stop polar bears being protected as an endangered species, the Guardian can disclose. Some of the scientists were funded by the oil industry.

In official submissions to the US government’s consultation on the status of the polar bear, Palin and her team referred to at least six scientists who have questioned either the existence of warming as a largely man-made phenomenon or its severity. One paper was partly funded by the US oil company ExxonMobil.

The status of the polar bear has become a battleground in the debate on global warming. In May the US department of the interior rejected Palin’s objections and listed the bear as a threatened species, saying that two-thirds of the world’s polar bears were likely to be extinct by 2050 due to the rapid melting of the sea ice. Palin, governor of Alaska and the Republican nominee for US vice-president, responded last month by suing the federal government, to try to overturn the ruling. The case will be heard in January.

Though the state of Alaska has no polar bear specialists on its staff, the governor’s stance has pitted it against the combined scientific fire-power of the US Fish and Wildlife Service, the US Geological Survey, and world experts on the mammal.

In its lawsuit, Alaska said it opposed the endangered label partly because the listing would “deter activities such as … oil and gas exploration and development”. Oil companies recently bid $2.7bn (£1.5bn) for rights to explore the Chuckchi sea, an established polar bear habitat.

The threatened species status might also impede the building of an Alaskan natural gas pipeline, which Palin has called the “will of God”. In a letter last year to the US interior secretary, Dirk Kempthorne, she said she believed the polar bear population was “abundant, stable and unthreatened by direct human activity”. She opposed the call for the listing because it “did not use the best available scientific and commercial information”.

Her own Alaskan review of the science drew on a joint paper by seven authors, four of whom were well-known climate- change contrarians. Her paper argued that it was “certainly premature, if not impossible” to link temperature rise in Alaska with human CO2 emissions.

The paper, entitled Polar Bears of Western Hudson Bay and Climate Change, has been criticised for relying on old research and ignoring evidence that Arctic sea-ice is melting at a quickening pace. Walt Meier, a world authority on sea ice, based at the National Snow and Ice Data Centre, said: “The paper doesn’t measure up scientifically.”

One co-author of the paper, Willie Soon, completed the study with funding from ExxonMobil — which has oil operations in Alaska’s North Slope — as well as from the American Petroleum Institute. Soon was a former senior scientist with the George C Marshall Institute, which acts as an incubator for climate-change scepticism. The institute has received $715,000 in funding from ExxonMobil since 1998.

In May, ExxonMobil announced that it was no longer funding Marshall and other groups linked with contrarian views. It said this was to avoid “distraction from the need to provide energy while reducing greenhouse gas emissions” and stressed that the company did not “control the research itself”.

Another co-author of the document was Sallie Baliunas. In 2003 she and Soon were criticised when it was revealed that a joint paper had been partially funded by the American Petroleum Institute. Thirteen scientists whom they cited issued a rebuttal and several editors of the journal Climate Research resigned because of the “flawed peer review”. A third co-author of the polar bear study, David Legates, a professor at Delaware University, is also associated with the Marshall Institute.

The citation by Palin and her officials prompted complaints from Congress. One member, Brad Miller, dubbed the polar bear study phony science.
Palin told Miller: “Attempts to discredit scientists…simply because their analyses do not agree with your views, would be a disservice to this country.” Miller now says that Palin’s use of the paper shows she differs greatly from John McCain, the Republican presidential contender, who has pressed for scientific integrity. “Turning to the cottage industry of scientists who are funded because they spread doubt about global warming is not integrity,” Miller said.

Palin’s submission consulted J Scott Armstrong, a specialist in forecasting, who regards the global warming issue as “public hysteria”.

Two other contrarian scholars were cited. One was Syun-Ichi Akasofu, formerly director of the International Arctic Research Centre, in Alaska, who argues that climate change could be a hangover from the -little ice age. He is a founding director of the Heartland Institute, a thinktank that has received $676,500 from ExxonMobil since 1998.

Timothy Ball, a retired professor from Winnipeg, is cited for his climate and polar bear research. He has called human-made global warming “the greatest deception in the history of science”. He has worked with both Friends of Science, and the Natural Resources Stewardship Project, which each had funding from energy firms.

Kert Davies, research director at Greenpeace US, said the state of Alaska under Palin’s leadership had relied on scholars who argue the opposite view to that of the overwhelming consensus in the scientific community. “It shows that she is completely out of touch with the urgency of the climate crisis.”
Last month Palin agreed that the Alaskan climate was changing but added: “I’m not one though who would attribute it to being man-made.” She later tried to retract the statement.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2008/sep/30/uselections2008.sarahpalin1

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Selkirk Manitoba Red River Walleye Fishing Challenge

Organizers for the Red River Walleye Challenge have caught their limit again.
For the second time in as many years, a full slate of 75 teams will launch from Selkirk Park On Oct. 5 for the ninth annual fishing derby created to help raise funds for CancerCare Manitoba.
Teams comprised of two females or one female and one male will get their lines in the water from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. in what will be another day of fun competition while supporting a cause that affects so many Manitobans.
“The last two years have been sellouts in what has become a highly supported community event,” RWWC director David Obirek said. “Next year will be our 10th anniversary and we’re all very excited to be able to keep this worthwhile event going.”
The Red River Walleye Challenge was founded in 1999 by Jim Steinke – owner of Jay Cee’s Rod & Reel Repairs – to showcase the Red River’s world class fishery and to provide a quality community event.
The tournament itself is a non-profit event with 75 per cent of paid entries received paid out to the top five teams – first place will receive in excess of $3,000.
The remaining 25 per cent is donated to CancerCare Manitoba for their efforts in women’s breast cancer research treatment, prevention, care and education for the citizens of Manitoba.

Through the generous sponsorship and donations of those involved, the tournament has given in excess of $28,000 to CancerCare Manitoba since the tournament’s inception.
CancerCare Manitoba special events co-ordinator Nicola Starin said with the amount of proactive work, early detection and the latest in treatment facilities available in Manitoba, breast cancer sufferers here have a survival rate of 87 per cent, 12 per cent higher than the national average.
She added CancerCare Manitoba has made big gains in cancer research over the last several years and a big part of that is due to community efforts like the local walleye challenge, but there’s still more work to be done.
“The numbers of people affected with breast cancer rise three per cent annually,” Starin said. “The more research, gifts and time donated can really make a difference.”
Starin said the male/female ratio at the event has become a big draw for female fishers. Husbands and wives, family members and friends have the opportunity to spend the day in a fun and professional fishing appeal.
“It has become a fantastic community event,” she said.
A rules meeting will be held at the Selkirk Inn and Conference Centre Oct. 4 at 6 p.m. Tournament rules will follow Manitoba Angler guidelines of catch and release.
When fishing ends at 4 p.m. anglers will gather at the Selkirk Inn and Conference Centre for presentations.
Prizes are awarded for top youth anger, biggest fish, top female team and top team as well as first to 15th place prizes.
Last year, first place went to Dan Meckling and Jinny Ching who took home just over $3,000 and a trophy for the cumulative 23.39-pound haul.
Leo Dean and Lucie Palmquist came second with two large walleye totalling 21.23 pounds. Tony Shirley and Doris Shirley brought in 20.14 pounds of Walleye and came in third.
Brad Melnyk won the largest fish award with his catch weighing in at 12.68 pounds. Top female team honours went to Darcy Wittig and Jan Neil and the top youth angler award presented to Destiny Sproule.

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Results Bass Angling Fishing Tournament

WBT Championship Pros (2007 season points race results listed)
1 Sheri Glasgow, Muskogee, Okla.; 1480
2 Pam Martin-Wells, Bainbridge, Ga.; 1344
3 Lucy Mize, Ben Lomond, Ark.; 1253
4 Audrey McQueen, Luna, N.M.; 1248
5 Juanita Robinson, Highlands, Texas; 1245
6 Tammy Richardson, Amity, Ark.; 1220
7 Judy Wong, Many, La.; 1214
8 Dianna Clark, Bumpus Mills , Tenn.; 1206
9 Cindy Hill, Smyrna, Tenn.; 1194
10 Penny Berryman, Hot Springs, Ark; 1173
11 Secret York, Benton, Ky.; 1162
12 Marcia Rubin, Chagrin Falls, Ohio; 1107

WBT Championship Co-Anglers
1 Jan Hudson, Harrison, Ark.; 1298
2 Karol Whitehurst, Winnsboro, Texas; 1297
3 Kala Wright, Spiro, Okla.; 1274
4 Laura Elkins, Amarillo, Te xas; 1232
5 Debbie Pegoli, Loveland, Ohio; 1165
6 Bonnie Ward, Snohomish, Wash.; 1155
7 Kim Stapp, Ringgold, Ga.; 1143
8 Cheryl Holloway, Pollack, La.; 1142
9 Dianne Kegley, Norphlet, Ark.; 1127
10 Colleen McKay, Worcester, Mass.; 1114
11 Angie Everitt, Livingston, Texas; 1112

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Kayyak Fishing

The Heliconia Press, a leading publisher of books and DVDs on outdoor pursuits, is proud to announce that “Kayak Fishing – The Ultimate Guide” DVD, released on February 1, 2008, has won Best Instructional Film at the third annual Reel Paddling Film Festival.

Beautifully shot in stunning locations, Kayak Fishing – The Ultimate Guide brings viewers right to the action as expert hosts Captain Scott Null and Joel McBride cover everything that is important to know about this exciting new sport. From paddling strokes and kayaking safety, to special equipment and kayak fishing techniques, Kayak Fishing – The Ultimate Guide helps beginners enter this exciting new sport safely and comfortably, while experienced kayak anglers can benefit from a wealth of tips and tricks on how to get the most out of their time on the water.

“Having recently authored a book together on the subject, Scott and I were thrilled to invite audiences along on film to show what this sport is all about – getting into new places, having a blast, and catching a ton of fish.” says Joel McBride, one of the engaging co-hosts of the DVD. “We’re thrilled to be recognized by the Reel Paddling Film Festival, and it’s very exciting that Kayak Fishing will be featured in Reel Paddling’s international screenings.”

The Heliconia Press, the publisher of Kayak Fishing – The Ultimate Guide DVD is also proud to announce that as part of their on-going environmental initiatives, the packaging of the DVD is made of 100% recycled post-consumer materials.

To order a copy of Kayak Fishing – The Ultimate Guide DVD (or the companion book by the same title), please visit The Heliconia Press website:
http://www.helipress.com/product/kayak-fishing–the-ultimate-guide-dvd-71.cfm. Kayak Fishing – The Ultimate Guide is available in book and DVD form at large book retailers, as well as many fishing, outdoor specialty and local book stores.

About The Heliconia Press
Since World Champion Ken Whiting founded the company in 1998, The Heliconia Press has been producing best-selling and award-winning instructional books and videos about kayaking and other outdoor pursuits. For more information about all of Heliconia’s products, please visit www.helipress.com.

About the Reel Paddling Film Festival
Rapid Media’s 3rd Annual Reel Paddling Film Festival World Tour brings the world’s best paddling films to paddlers in Canada, United States and around the world. The festival inspires more people to explore rivers, lakes and oceans, push physical and emotional extremes, embrace the lifestyle and appreciate the heritage of the places we paddle. For more information, please visit www.rapidmedia.com.

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Travel Manitoba Information

Official tourism site for this Canadian province. Features quick facts about the province and its history, and materials for visitors about accommodations, events, outdoor adventures, and regions (such as Winnipeg and Pembina Valley). Also includes details about the Manitoba Masters Angler Program, and maps and photos. In English and French.

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Manitoba Polar Bear Adventure Holiday

Why not visit the “Polar Bear Capital” of the world in Churchill, Manitoba to see these magnificent carnivores in their winter habitat. From late November to December, the bears gather on Cape Churchill, on the western shores of Hudson Bay to wait while the Bay freezes over, to enable them to move onto the ice floes. These semi-aquatic mammals have adapted to life on land, sea and ice

This migration of Polar Bears on to the ice is one of the great wildlife spectacles and enables them to feed on the many seals which also populate the region. In fact, the bears will eat anything they can kill and are certainly liable to attack humans. With males weighing up to 600Kg, they are an awesome killing machine but despite their size and aggression, they have a curious nature which has caused the inhabitants of Churchill some problems in the past. The town rubbish dump has had to be closed to prevent scavaging by bears.

As soon as the waters of Hudson Bay freeze, the males and the non-pregnant females having returned from their summer ranges, move onto the ice and stay there for the winter, hunting seals. Pregnant females have already hibernated in October and give birth to two or three cubs in March. Cubs stay with their parents until they are 3 years old and may be seen at this time.

The waters around Gordon Point and Cape Churchill are normally the first areas to freeze and provide ideal viewing points for visitors – and of course the keen photographers. The accepted method is to travel to the areas in what are known as “Tundra Buggies. These are specially converted vehicles with heating, large tundra tyres and a viewing platform at the rear which allows incredible photo opportunities. Bears are often seen inspecting these vehicles and occupants at close quarters! Never fear! You are unlikely to be eaten if you are inside the buggie.

While other wildlife is absent in the winter, Caribou, Wolves and Arctic Foxes may be seen, together with Snowy Owls and Ptarmigan.

Those staying longer will witness the incredible phenomenon of the “Northern Lights”. This region has the highest density of auroral activity in the Arctic which provides spectacular colour in the night skies

This must be a dream trip for photographers and wildlife lovers alike, to get so close to Polar Bears, in safety and to appreciate their awesome size and presence.

http://www.traveladvicepages.com/canada/polar-bears-adventure-holiday

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Manitoba Interlake Bumpkins Comments

Interlake Spectator — Great opinion last Fri., March 31, ‘Jim’!
There are a select few who reciprocate, contribute, extend respectability and bestow blessings on our town and its people.
Then there are the takers Jim has referred to as ‘stakeholders’. Their calculated decisions are created behind closed doors, quietly, secretly, with a select few muckety-mucks, the so called elite and the wanna-bees. They negotiate with shrewd compromise. Their new ideas are supposedly clear and economically expressed usually with an off-hand witty twist. They object to any interference from we ‘the ordinary people’, the ‘country bumpkins’’, the so-called ‘brain dead’ seniors or their supposedly ignorant siblings.
I could have sworn we voted and ‘Kevin Chudd’ came in as our mayor. Was that a fantasy?
Together let’s dismantle our council in October. One councillor who handles and makes decisions with our money for the RM of Gimli appears to be the instigator of what should be attended to or constructed next. Both puppets in council agree with him and knock out what our mayor may have in mind for the town.

Luke, the main councillor, has created a new job for himself. Overseeing the income at the Sportspark and surveying future work to be completed. He’ll be paid by the hour for his time in the Sportspark. With the work soon to commence he’ll be there 12 hours a day.
Neither the new manager nor ‘Luke’ know anything about a Sportspark.
Our mayor objected to the decision, but could not alter the facts as Mayor Chudd does not have a vote in the Industrial Group, though Luke does. They have been ruling too long.

 Manitoba Interlake Bumpkins Comments

Hopefully the ‘stakeholders’ will not strive to break or interrupt the effort of those new citizens attempting to work as councillors in the future for our mayor whoever he or she may be.
Bye the bye, I learned that when Mayor Chudd claimed all the workers volunteered to work in the Sportspark last summer it was true. General handymen are scarce in spring and summer in the Interlake. Chudd was correct, but not explicit. Many men did arrive and volunteer to work … but with pay. General workers received $100 a day from the Industrial Group and those paid by the hour from the RM of Gimli. Figure that one out.
Maggie Stephenson
Gimli, MB

P.S. Is no one out there beginning to see the light?!

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Canada’s Green 2008 Budget

Canada’s Green Budget Coalition highlights key environmental priorities for the 2008 federal budget in Big Steps Forward: Recommendations for Budget 2008.

Mirroring Canadians’ concern for the environment, the Coalition budget recommendations focus on federal government efforts. Jim MacNeill, a leading environmental thinker said, “The budget is the single most important policy statement a government makes about its environment.”

The Coalition report indicates Canada’s economy is suffering from over consumption and inefficient use of non-renewable natural resources. Market prices undervalue the environmental impacts of over-polluting our air, water and soil.

The Coalition, comprised of 19 environmental and conservation organizations, formulated three priority recommendations for a better Canada; carbon pricing, action on Nature, and renewing the Great Lakes and St. Lawrence River Region.

Other suggestions included in the report are:

  • A cap and trade system on carbon or a tax of $30 per tone of carbon dioxide by 2009, increasing to $75 per tonne by 2020.
  • $1 billion investment over the next 5 years to establish national parks and protected areas for marine and terrestrial biodiversity conservation.
  • Convert 2 million acres of cropland to permanent cover and riparian protection to improve water quality.
  • Create a comprehensive, long-term sustainability strategy for the Great lakes and St. Lawrence River Region to clean up areas of concern and invest in water and wastewater infrastructure.

View December 19, 2007 Green Budget Coalition release
View 2008 report, Big Steps Forward: Recommendation for Budget 2008 (PDF)

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Protection from Bulk Water Removal Canada

A Model Act has been proposed to restrict bulk removal of Canadian water. The Canadian Water Issues Council (CWIC), authors of the paper, are conducting policy research on trans-boundary water issues.

A Model Act for Preserving Canada’s Waters, prepared in collaboration with Program on Water Issues (POWI) calls for immediate legislation to protect Canadian water basins. Ensuring water resources are sustained for future generations is vital in the face of climate change, pollution, urbanization, and over-consumption.

In 2002 the federal government prohibited bulk water removals from boundary water basins. The Model Act fosters sustainable use of all Canada’s water resources by providing a minimum national standard and allows provincial governments to create their own legal regimes. A variety of reports suggest federal policy on bulk water removal is inadequate.

The discussion for this February 2008 Briefing Paper was hosted by POWI at the Munk Center for International Studies, University of Toronto.

View 2008 report, A Model Act for Preserving Canada’s Waters (PDF)

2008 report, A Model Act for Preserving Canada’s Waters

Visit Program on Water Issues website

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View Protection of the Waters of the Great Lakes (PDF)

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Canada’s Climatic Change – Green Zone Awareness

Canada’s release of a climate change adaptation report has been stalled since fall 2007. The report highlights key issues for each region in Canada and outlines risks and opportunities for climate change adaptation.

The scientific report from Natural Resources Canada entitled From Impacts to Adaptation: Canada in a Changing Climate 2007 was scheduled to be released prior to the United Nations Climate Change Conference in Bali. Climate Action Network Canada is pressuring Natural Resource Minister Gary Lunn to make the report public.

“Could the Minister at least tell Canadians when the report will be released?” asked Graham Saul, Executive Director of CAN-RAC.

The report is intended to inform decision-making and policy development about how Canada can adapt to climate change. It describes Canada’s vulnerability to global warming and reflects scientific advances in understanding.

The report builds on the 2004 report, Climate Change Impacts and Adaptation: a Canadian Perspective and is the final product of the Canadian Climate Impacts and Adaptation Network (C-CIARN), who since their creation in 2001 completed over 130 research projects. The report compliments the Fourth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change and the Arctic Climate Impacts Assessment.

View January 23, 2008 Climate Action Network Canada release
View Natural Resources Canada – Climate Change Impacts and Adaptation Program
View Climate Change Impacts and Adaptation: a Canadian Perspective (PDF)
View Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change Fourth Assessment Report – Climate Change 2007: Synthesis Report
Visit Arctic Climate Impacts Assessment

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Winter 2008/ 09 Ice Fishing Lake Manitoba Narrows Just Around the Corner

Canadian Ice Fishing Hut

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AS the lakes of the Midwest, Northeast and Canada freeze, clusters of fishing shacks appear, forming villages above the best wintertime fishing spots — despite the cracking, moaning and eerie warbling of the thickening but unstable skin of ice.

Once a foot of ice accumulates, fishermen in New York tow houses onto Saratoga, Oneida and Champlain. In Michigan, ice-fishing villages sprout on Houghton, the state’s biggest inland lake, and nearby Higgins, where anglers camp in their shacks all night to catch rainbow smelt. The self-proclaimed ice-fishing capital of the East is Lake Simcoe, north of Toronto, where as many as 4,000 ice huts appear. And don’t forget about Lake Winnipesaukee in New Hampshire.

But nowhere are these ad hoc housing developments more impressive than on Mille Lacs Lake in central Minnesota, where, in a typical winter, some 5,000 shelters create villages across 200 square miles of snow and ice. Most, known locally as icehouses or fish houses, are basic shacks cobbled from plywood and two-by-twos, and just big enough for a couple of guys to tend a fishing hole in each corner, drink a few Grain Belt beers and listen to hockey or basketball on the radio.

But as in any community, there are houses for the common folk and there are those that stand out from the rest: chalets with cathedral ceilings, sleeping lofts, hardwood floors, kitchens with custom cabinets. And, of course, satellite TV. They can cost as much as $10,000, if you do the work yourself, and three times that if you don’t.

Call them cabins on the lake — literally — or McMansions on ice. By law, the houses, some weighing several tons, must return to land by the end of February, before they sink. In the meantime, the best provide not only a place to fish but also a hideaway where friends and family visit.

The fishing lines, with auto jiggers and rattle reels, pretty much tend themselves. Occupants just have to yank up the fish. Otherwise, they can cook, sleep, play cards, drink beer, gab with the neighbors — and savor the architectural detail.

Some owners of icehouses are so invested in their getaways that they don’t even need ice. They continue to use their houses during the summer when they are stored on shore.

“A guy can come out here for a weekend, it’s pretty cheap,” said Randy Duffy, who owns a metallurgical company in the Twin Cities area. He fishes from a 10-by-20-foot house that has a sound system, DVD player, satellite TV and full kitchen.

“I mean, you bring a couple steaks with you, couple pizzas, bring what you want to drink, some movies and make it a weekend for 20, 25 bucks,” he said. “Cheap getaway. It’s even better if the fish bite.”

MILLE LACS is too broad to see across in places. It is windy and shallow, and one of the state’s best fishing lakes. Dangling minnows through the ice, anglers yank up fearsome northern pike that weigh more than 20 pounds; delectable walleyes, the state fish, of up to 10 pounds; and jumbo yellow perch of over a pound that are some of the sweetest eating to come from fresh water.

On North Slips Reef, on the lake’s south shore, sits Craig Freeman’s icehouse, a model of efficiency. “I wanted to use all 24 feet,” he said.

On a mid-January morning, as the lake awakened from overnight temperatures of 20 below zero, Mr. Freeman was fishing with his 17-year-old son, Ryan. A 50-year-old machinist from Big Lake, about 30 miles northwest of Minneapolis, Mr. Freeman started fishing Mille Lacs when he was a kid.

His father owned a basic shack. He took it over when his father gave up the sport, but found the house too small. “I built this house because I wanted something that my family could enjoy,” he said.

So 10 years ago, he bought a used house, installed it on a new stainless-steel skid system, added four feet to its length, popped up the roof, and added double-glazed low-energy windows. He finished the ceiling in knotty pine. A friend built the custom kitchen cabinets.

Mr. Freeman wired the house for a 110-volt system powered by a generator, and a 12-volt circuit that runs off a battery. Propane heats the place and fuels the Magic Chef range and oven.

“I can cook anything I want here,” he said. “I can cook a turkey, pot roast.”

But his real concern was space for guests. He designed the kitchen table to convert to a double bed. The cathedral ceiling, nearly 10 feet high, accommodates bunks in lofts tucked in either end. In all, eight people can stay over.

Mr. Freeman even installed a bathroom in one corner, with a stainless-steel urinal. “Not too many guys have one of them on the lake,” he said.

He estimates that his finished house weighs nearly five tons (the houses are generally built on skids and pulled by a four-wheel-drive pickup truck). “I like to have at least 12 inches of ice,” he said.

Often, as a lake freezes, pressures building in the new ice form cracks that run for hundreds of yards. Under the pressure of wind, and the expansion and contraction from changes in temperature, ice sheets grind like tectonic plates.

“It’s like being out in California,” Mr. Freeman said. “It’s kind of unnerving. But I’ve been out fishing since I was 5, and I know what goes on out here in the wintertime.”

Mr. Freeman hasn’t ever gone through the ice, “God willing.” But anglers and vehicles do, occasionally with fatal results. Big houses can depress the ice, causing water to flood the surface. Sometimes, they even break through.

So, why take the risk?

“I enjoy the peace and serenity,” he said. “I love this lake. Just being out on the ice and being by myself, and seeing what nature has to offer in the wintertime.”

Mark Rislund feels the same way.

“It’s peaceful coming up here,” he said. “I just come out here to relax. Go around to the neighbors’, shoot the bull a little bit.”

As he spoke, the ice shuddered beneath the house. “Last night it was popping pretty good,” he said.

Mr. Rislund is an owner of a construction firm in the Twin Cities region. He has ice-fished most of his life, and he took over his dad’s house.

It wasn’t small, but “it was drafty,” said Mr. Rislund, who is 41. “The older you get the more comfort you need.”

So he built a giant among icehouses — 10 by 28 feet. The project took three years. He built the house within a steel frame — he described it as a birdcage — that envelops the entire structure to give it rigidity to withstand the stress of towing it between shore and ice. He insulated the walls and finished them with tongue-and-groove knotty pine and maple wainscoting.

A glass-front propane stove keeps the place toasty. He has an indoor toilet, and a full kitchen. An eight-pound walleye hangs on one wall, a northern pike of nearly 20 pounds on another. Mr. Rislund caught both on Mille Lacs.

The house has seven holes. Ice fishing isn’t much of an athletic event, anyway — even less so in a house like Mr. Rislund’s. Fishing lines hang from wall-mounted rattle reels that alert (or wake) the angler when a fish bites. Mr. Rislund even has a jigging gizmo to lift and lower the bait automatically.

Like most posh icehouses nowadays, Mr. Rislund’s place is equipped with a high-output sound system, DVD player and satellite television. On a mid-January day, however, one of the two TVs was hooked up to an underwater camera that showed several fish lurking near a wriggling minnow 26 feet below. “Perch coming in, huh?” he said.

With a click of a remote control, he spun the camera for a look around.

“Last year, there was a big northern, looked like a big log coming in,” he said. “Looked at the minnow and swam off.”

The house is a hit with Mr. Rislund’s 4-year-old daughter, Cassidy, whose Scooby-Doo minnow scoop sat in the corner. “She loves it,” he said. In fact, she is behind his latest inspiration.

“This summer, I think I’m going to start a guesthouse,” he said. “When the daughter gets older, she can bring a friend. They can sit over there and play video games.”

As for cost, Mr. Rislund was reluctant to pin it down (though he acknowledged the steel frame alone cost $6,000). “I got a good idea,” he said, “but I don’t want to let it out because the wife might get a little upset.”

For fit and polish, it’s hard to beat the 10-foot-by-20-foot house that Steve Mattson built with his cousin Scott Daniels.

“People come in here and go, ‘Wow!’ ” Mr. Mattson said. “Then they go to the floor and they go, ‘Wow’ again.”

The reason is clear once you step inside: from wall to wall, Mr. Mattson’s fish house is finished with a parquet floor, an intricate pattern of herringbone, borders and rectangles made of Australian cypress, maple and Brazilian cherry.

BUT that’s not all. Mr. Mattson, a 52-year-old custodian and “jack of all trades,” and Mr. Daniels, a 42-year-old appliance salesman, finished the walls and cathedral ceiling in tongue-and-groove cedar. The sun pours in through a skylight, and Mr. Mattson and Mr. Daniels made the birch cabinets by hand. (A heated outhouse — also with a parquet floor — sits nearby.)

“It’s built nice,” Mr. Mattson said, “as nice as any house you’ll find anywhere.”

“It took us nine months — and what did we figure? — about 150 cases of beer,” Mr. Daniels said. “Almost a couple of divorces.”

http://travel.nytimes.com/2008/02/15/travel/escapes/15icehouse.html

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Fall 2008 Walleye Series

The Schedule for 2008 Full Throttle Walleye Series includes MN division April 26th, Mississippi River pool 4, June 28th Mille Lacs, and Sept. 6 St.Croix River. The WI events include Lake Winnebago April 12th, Lake Winnebago May 31, and Bay of Green Bay Sept. 13th.

Events are designed with a pre-tournament meeting on Friday night before the tournament where there is a free dinner, door prizes and an inspirational speaker.

The majority of the pre-tournament meetings are held at local churches in conjunction to the tournament site. Full Throttle Outdoors is a faith based ministry to walleye fisherman at all levels.

Each is event is $200 a-team and the tournaments pay back 1 in 5 boats. Payback amount is based on the number of boats. Example payout for a 75-boat tournament for 1st place would be $3,000 and would pay down to 15th place. Entry fee also includes Big Fish. Ranger Cup money is also available for all contestants who have signed up for the Ranger Cup program. Trophies, free dinner, and door prizes at each event. The top 5 teams from each division receive a FREE entry into the Full Throttle Championship for 2008 in October.

MN Directors Mark and NaCole Schutz have run fishing events in MN for years. Chris Jones Full Throttles Outdoors Director in WI has also been running fishing events for many years.

Full Throttle Outdoors is sponsored by Ranger Boats and Mercury motors. FTO (Full Throttle Outdoors) is looking for elite companies to showcase there fine products at their events, website, media, and through Full hrottle’s newsletter sent out to members and family’s.

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Fenwick ELITE TECH Rods

 Fenwick  ELITE TECH Rods

“Fenwick® ELITE TECH rods are the PERFECT Fishing Rods”- Hank Parker. As one of the worlds premier rod builders, at Fenwick® we challenged our Senior Engineers and our Elite Pros to think outside the box, and to design and produce the finest fishing rods ever built, and they overdelivered. They not only built the finest fishing rods made, but they built one to perfectly meet the specific technical needs of each and every fishing technique. Whether you pitch, flip, crank, drop shot, jerk, skip, stroke, jig, worm, carolina rig, spinnerbait, swim bait, or fish frog baits, Fenwick® has built the PERFECT rod to meet your specific need. Each model is designed with unique components to provide maximum performance. Special handles were designed for each fishing application, and the blanks and guides are tuned for maximum strength and sensitivity. Fenwick® ELITE TECH rods are truly perfect fishing rods for every fishing application.Carolina rigging is probably the most often used open water technique available. 3 Models, 2 Casting and a spinning are required to cover all needs from long distance casts, to ultra sensitivity for lighter bites. Specially designed to combine sensitivity and durability make these high performance rods, yet they can stand up to the riggers of tournament fishing. There is nothing worse than having your equipment fail just when you are going for the big win. It has taken many years of development by Fenwick® to perfect this balance resulting in these Fenwick® Elite Tech RIGGIN’ STIKS.

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Yamaha Highest in Customer Satisfaction with Four-Stroke Outboard Engines

Yamaha has been ranked “Highest in Customer Satisfaction with Four-Stroke Outboard Engines” in the J.D. Power and Associates 2008 Marine Engine Competitive Information Study(SM). This is the fifth time Yamaha has been recognized in J.D. Power and Associates studies, and the announcement comes on the heels of Yamaha’s winning its sixth consecutive Customer Satisfaction Index (C.S.I.) from the National Marine Manufacturing Association (NMMA(R)) last fall.

“We are honored, and we accept this recognition on behalf of our dealers and boat builder partners,” said Phil Dyskow, president of Yamaha Marine Group. “Our goal has long been to strive for the highest level of customer satisfaction for outboard motors in the industry. That goal is an upwardly moving target. Thankfully, we have been moving with the target by investing in our people, our procedures and our products. Many of these investments have paid off for our customers.”

Prior to the fielding period of the J.D. Power and Associates study, Yamaha Marine Group created a customer relations department specifically for outboard motors. This occurred during a time when many industries were outsourcing functions such as customer relations. The move, along with many other smaller, less visible changes, has improved Yamaha’s relationship with owners.

“Customer service belongs in the same building as the rest of the company,” said Dyskow. “When and if customers have a problem, they want a knowledgeable voice on the other end of the phone and access to all of the product technical experts.”

Each Yamaha Marine customer relations team member is trained in marine outboard service. The team is led by a Coast Guard-licensed captain, and team members have a rigorous, regular product training regimen. Last year, their training included disassembling and reassembling many outboard motors to become more familiar with internal parts and powerhead layout.

In 2006, Yamaha created PowerMatched(TM), a power system package that coupled Yamaha rigging and parts with Yamaha outboards. According to Yamaha’s own CSI surveys, boats using PowerMatched rigging components rate approximately 3 percent higher in customer satisfaction than boats that do not.

Yamaha Marine Group recently invested heavily in training and currently offers the most comprehensive programs in the marine outboard industry. Called Yamaha Marine University,(TM) it aims to support Yamaha dealers by providing a course of study that concentrates on improving profitability and customer satisfaction.

Yamaha received the highest numerical score for EFI four-stroke engines in the proprietary J.D. Power and Associates 2008 Marine Engine Competitive Information Study. The study was based on 6,973 responses, measuring four EFI four-stroke engine brands and owner opinions for the 2006 and 2007 model-year boats registered from June 2006 to May 2007. Proprietary study results are based on experiences and perceptions of owners surveyed in September and October 2007.

Yamaha Marine products are marketed throughout the United States and around the world. Yamaha Marine Group, based in Kennesaw, Ga., supports its 2,200 U.S. dealers and OEM partners with marketing, training and parts for Yamaha’s full line of products and strives to be the industry leader in reliability, technology and customer service. Yamaha Marine is the only outboard company to have earned NMMA(R)’s C.S.I. Customer Satisfaction Index award every year since its inception.

About J.D. Power and Associates: Headquartered in Westlake Village, Calif., J.D. Power and Associates is an ISO 9001-registered global marketing information services firm operating in key business sectors including market research, forecasting, performance improvement, training and customer satisfaction. The firm’s quality and satisfaction measurements are based on responses from millions of consumers annually. J.D. Power and Associates is a business unit of The McGraw-Hill Companies.

This document contains many of Yamaha’s valuable trademarks. It may also contain trademarks belonging to other companies.

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Highest in Customer Satisfaction with Fiberglass Bass Boats 2008

Bass Cat Boats received it’s fourth (4th) consecutive J.D. Power and Associates award for; Highest in Customer Satisfaction with Fiberglass Bass Boats 2008.

The award marks a four (4) year run by Bass Cat since entering the J.D. Power and Associates study, beginning with 2005, 2006, 2007, and now 2008.

Attending from Mountain Home, AR were Rick Pierce and Dee Ezell of Bass Cat Boats. In relationship to the award, Rick was quick to point out that “while this is a prestigious award, what is important are the Owners and the Staff of the Bass Cat Family, which made this possible.” “They enjoy our product and we work hard to give them the best product we can, with service second to none.”

Comments from Dee Ezell showed deep appreciation for “the support that those many members of the Bass Cat Family have shown.” “It remains Bass Cat’s goal to provide the best in service for many years to come.” Also thanking the “dealers (of Bass Cat) which also make this award possible.” She further mentioned, “there is no time to relax in today’s cyclical market.”

Rick added that they “prefer a silent humble approach to our business, one in line with the image of Bass Cat and principles of the family.” Adding that “awards are for today, they are not a heritage.” Further emphasizing on “being a full service company in a self service market.” Both Dee and Rick also thanked their individual families for enduring their lifestyle and the passion of Bass Cat.

Commitment to it’s Dealers and Owners is a longstanding tradition with Bass Cat. The Pierce family has produced Bass Cat Boat’s into it’s 37th year. And even earlier began it’s roots on small wooden boats, which Ron Pierce built in high school.

Bass Cat is an independently owned and operated company founded by Ron & Jan Pierce in 1971. The receipt of this award for the fourth time is the most received by any bass boat company, in a study where only one such award per category is presented.

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Sierra Club chides Ottawa on environmental record

The Sierra Club of Canada is giving the federal Conservatives a failing grade for their environmental record and kudos to Quebec and British Columbia for their efforts to reduce emissions.

A report by the Ottawa-based environmental group says federal officials have a lot to learn from their municipal and provincial counterparts when it comes to climate change.

The report was released in advance of Saturday’s three-year anniversary of the Kyoto Protocol.

Spokesman Stephen Hazell said the international agreement is binding and still in effect, even though Ottawa is proceeding with its own climate-change plan.

Mr. Hazell commended Quebec and British Columbia for coming up with serious strategies to reduce emissions, and he extended praise to more than 150 municipalities that have signed onto a climate change plan.

He said environmentalists across the country will work hard to make the environment a key issue whenever a federal election is called.

“The next federal election will give Canadians the chance to demand serious action to reduce emissions so that Canada can hold its head high internationally as a respected steward of the atmosphere,” said Jean Langlois, the Sierra Club’s national campaign director.

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20080213.wsierra0213/BNStory/National/?page=rss&id=RTGAM.20080213.wsierra0213

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Only about 4% of the world’s oceans remain undamaged by human activity

Only about 4% of the world’s oceans remain undamaged by human activity, according to the first detailed global map of human impacts on the seas.

A study in Science journal says climate change, fishing, pollution and other human factors have exacted a heavy toll on almost half of the marine waters.

Only remote icy areas near the poles are relatively pristine, but they face threats as ice sheets melt, it warns.

The authors say the data is a “wake-up call” to policymakers.

I think the big surprise from all of this was seeing what the complete coverage of human impacts was
Dr Mark Spalding, The Nature Conservancy
Lead scientist, Dr Benjamin Halpern, of the National Center for Ecological Analysis and Synthesis in Santa Barbara, US, said humans were having a major impact on the oceans and the marine ecosystems within them.”In the past, many studies have shown the impact of individual activities,” he said. “But here for the first time we have produced a global map of all of these different activities layered on top of each other so that we can get this big picture of the overall impact that humans are having rather than just single impacts.”Co-author Dr Mark Spalding told BBC News that the map was the first attempt to describe and quantify the combined threats facing the world’s oceans from human factors, ranging from commercial shipping to over-fishing.

“There’s an element of wake-up call when you get maps like this,” he said. “Human threats are all pervasive across the world’s oceans.

“The map is an impetus for action, I think that it is a real signal to roll up our sleeves and start managing our coast and oceans.”

Complex model

The international team of 20 scientists in the US, Canada and UK built a complex model to handle large amounts of information on 17 different human threats.

The researchers divided the world’s oceans into 1km-square sections and examined all real data available on how humankind is influencing the marine environment.

They then calculated “human impact scores” for each location, presenting this as a global map of the toll people have exacted on the seas.

The scientists say they were shocked by the findings.

“I think the big surprise from all of this was seeing what the complete coverage of human impacts was,” said Dr Spalding, senior marine scientist for international conservation group The Nature Conservancy.

“There’s nowhere really that escaped. It’s quite a shocking map to see.”

He said the two biggest drivers in destroying marine habitats were climate change and over-fishing.

“Out on the high seas, climate change and fishing were far and away the strongest influences,” he explained. “The least impacted areas are the polar regions but they are not untouched.”

Clear message

The scientists hope the map will be used to prioritise marine conservation efforts.

Andrew Rosenberg, a professor of natural resources at the University of New Hampshire, US, who was not part of the study, said policymakers could no longer focus on fishing or pollution as if they were separate effects.

“These human impacts overlap in space and time, and in far too many cases the magnitude is frighteningly high,” he said.

“The message for policymakers seems clear to me: conservation action that cuts across the whole set of human impacts is needed now in many places around the globe.”

The findings of the study were presented at the annual meeting of the American Association for Advancement of Science (AAAS) in Boston, US

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Mystery of the Missing Fish

Mystery of the Missing Fish

stocks plummet, leaving an industry in crisis and a rash of unanswered questions

Anglers off the California coast began noticing it a few winters ago. The number of chinook salmon, a hardy breed that supports much of the fishing economy from here to Oregon, was mysteriously declining. After a decade of steady catches, fishing boats found themselves with empty hooks. “Everybody was just scratching their heads going, ‘What happened to the fish?’ ” says Zeke Grader, executive director of the Pacific Coast Federation of Fishermen’s Associations.
Catching a haul of chinook, or king, salmon off Point Reyes, Calif.
Catching a haul of chinook, or king, salmon off Point Reyes, Calif.
(Erhardt Krause/Sacramento Bee/Zuma)
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Now, what was bad has gotten worse. Last month, the Pacific Fishery Management Council announced that the fall salmon run in the Sacramento River, where most of the chinook off California go to spawn, had experienced an “unprecedented collapse.” Only about 90,000 adult salmon were counted this fall; five years ago, almost 800,000 salmon returned to the river. Ominously, the number of immature males that are used to predict the rate of return next year also plummeted, from 40,000 in a typical year to 2,000.

The fishing industry is bracing for more hard times. “The Sacramento River fish are our bread and butter,” says Dave Bitts, a fisherman in Eureka, Calif. Agency officials will meet in March to assess options for the fishing season, which begins in May. Strict regulations on the salmon catch are likely. Says Bitts: “That will have the effect of closing the fishery in California completely.”

Hostile habitat. Which leaves fishermen and scientists asking: Where did all the fish go? Experts cite two likely causes: several years of abnormal ocean conditions, some of which may be related to global warming, and an increase in water pumped from the salmon’s habitat to Southern California. In a remarkable journey, Sacramento salmon swim to the ocean through a delta filled with predators, dams, and pumping stations and then, after several years, return to the river to spawn. Both environments are becoming increasingly hostile. In the past five years, the amount of water pumped from the Sacramento Delta has increased by 20 percent. It’s no coincidence that salmon numbers have fallen in the same period, says Tina Swanson, senior scientist at the Bay Institute, an environmental group. “There is clearly something really, really wrong with the watershed.”

Salmon’s salvation has been the open ocean, where they feast on crustaceans and smaller fish. But the ocean hasn’t been welcoming lately, either, and marine life—including birds—has suffered up and down the Pacific coast. “Ocean conditions have been really squirrelly,” says Bruce MacFarlane, a fishery biologist at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. A seasonal upwelling, which brings cold, nutrient-rich water and food from the bottom of the ocean to the surface, has become less predictable. Water temperatures have climbed. And in some areas, the current has shifted from the north—where it brings food from Canada and Alaska—to the south.

Scientists aren’t sure what’s causing the changes, but some of them, they say, may be due to global warming. Indeed, many wonder if the salmon collapse could be a preview of a warmer and harder-to-forecast future. “The climate is changing, and the past isn’t going to be a great guide,” says Nate Mantua, a research professor at the University of Washington’s school for aquatic and fishery science. “You can’t be sure what will happen next.”

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