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Lake Sturgeon
A lake sturgeon
Conservation status
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Actinopterygii
Order: Acipenseriformes
Family: Acipenseridae
Genus: Acipenser
Species: A. fulvescens
Binomial name
Acipenser fulvescens
(Rafinesque, 1817)

The lake sturgeon (Acipenser fulvescens) is a North American temperate freshwater fish, one of about 25 species of sturgeon. Like other sturgeons, this species is an evolutionarily ancient bottomfeeder with a partly cartilaginous skeleton, a overall streamlined shape and skin bearing rows of bony plates on its sides and back, resembling an armored torpedo. The fish uses its elongated, spadelike snout to stir up the substrate and sediments on the beds of rivers and lakes while feeding. The lake sturgeon has four purely sensory organs that dangle near its mouth. These organs, called barbels, help the sturgeon to locate bottom-dwelling prey.Lake sturgeons can grow to a relatively large size, topping six feet (two meters) long and weighing nearly 200 pounds (90 kilograms). Lake sturgeon are also extremely long-lived fish, males may live some 55 years, and female lake sturgeon can reach 150 years. The lake sturgeon doesn't reach sexual maturity until its third decade of life.[2]

This species occurs in the Mississippi River drainage basin south to Alabama and Mississippi. It occurs in the Great Lakes and east down the St. Lawrence River to the limits of fresh water. In the west it reaches Lake Winnipeg and the North and South Saskatchewan Rivers. In the north it is found in the Hudson Bay Lowland.[3] This distribution makes sense in that all these areas were linked by the large lakes that formed as the glaciers retreated from North America at the end of the last ice age (e.g., Lake Agassiz, Lake Iroquois).

The lake sturgeon has taste buds on and around its barbels near its rubbery, prehensile lips. It extends its lips to vacuum up soft live food which it swallows whole due to its lack of teeth. Its diet consists of insect larvae, worms (including leeches), and other small organisms (primarily metazoan) it finds in the mud. Fish are rarely found in its diet and are likely incidental items only, with the possible exception of the invasive Round Goby.[4] Given that it is a large species surviving by feeding on very small species, its feeding ecology has been compared to that of large marine animals, like some whales, which survive by filter-feeding.[5]

These fish were once killed as a nuisance bycatch because they damaged fishing gear. When their meat and eggs became prized, commercial fishermen targeted them. Between 1879 and 1900, the Great Lakes commercial sturgeon fishery brought in an average of 4 million pounds (1.8 metric tons) per year. Such unsustainable catch rates were coupled with environmental challenges such as pollution and the construction of dams and other flood control measures. Sturgeons, which return each spring to spawn in the streams and rivers in which they were born, found tributaries blocked and spawning shoals destroyed by silt from agriculture and lumbering. The 20th century saw drastic drops in sturgeon catches, increased regulations, and the closure of viable fisheries. Currently 19 of the 20 states within the fish's original U.S. range list it as either threatened or endangered.

This sturgeon is a valuable gourmet food fish, as well as source of specialty products including caviar and isinglass. The exploitation of the sturgeon typifies human exploitation of large animals in general. "In 1860, this species, taken on incidental catches of other fishes, was killed and dumped back in the lake, piled up on shore to dry and be burned, fed to pigs, or dug into the earth as fertilizer." [6] It was even stacked like cordwood and used to fuel steamboats. Once its value was realized, "They were taken by every available means from spearing and jigging to set lines of baited or unbaited hooks laid on the bottom to trapnets, poundnets and gillnets."[7] Over 5 million pounds were taken from Lake Erie in a single year. The fishery collapsed, largely by 1900. They have never recovered. Like most sturgeons, the lake sturgeon is rare now, and is protected in many areas.

In addition to overharvesting, it has also been negatively affected by pollution and loss of migratory waterways. It is vulnerable to population declines through overfishing due to its extremely slow reproductive cycle; most individuals caught before twenty years of age have never bred and females spawn only once every four or five years. The specific harvesting of breeding females for their roe is also damaging to population size. Few individuals ever reach the extreme old age or large size that those of previous generations often did.

Today, limited sturgeon fishing seasons are permitted in only a few areas including some locations in Minnesota, Wisconsin and Michigan. Fishing for sturgeon is allowed on Black Lake in Michigan, for example, but the fishery is limited to five total fish taken each year, each over 36 inches (910 mm) and taken through the ice with spears.

Anglers in Minnesota have the opportunity to harvest one lake sturgeon per calendar year between 45 and 50 inches on the Rainy River and Lake of the Woods on the Canadian border. The early season runs from April 24 to May 7 each year with the late season running from July 1 to September 30. Anglers must have a valid Minnesota fishing license and purchase a sturgeon tag to harvest a lake sturgeon.

There is also an annual sturgeon spearing season on Lake Winnebago in Wisconsin. It has changed from a 16 day season in the past to a season with a marked quota, however, the season can still run for the full 16 days. If 90–99% of the quota is reached on any day the season is over at 12:30 pm the following day. If 100% (or more) of the quota is reached the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources can enable an emergency stoppage rule.[8] In 2012, the largest sturgeon ever harvested on Lake Winnebago (a female) was 125 years old, weighed 240 pounds, and measured 87.5 inches in length.[9]

The sturgeon is also present in Quebec in the St. Lawrence River, where it is targeted by commercial fisheries. It is also a game fish with an harvest limit of 1 per day. It is probably the only place where it is fairly common to catch one.

Wolf Lake State Fish Hatchery located in Kalamazoo,MI raises and releases lake sturgeon , and is the only fish hatchery in Michigan to do so. The lake sturgeon are produced mainly for inland waters although a few are stocked in Great Lakes waters.

Gallery [edit]

See also [edit]

References [edit]

  1. ^ St. Pierre, R. & Runstrom, A. (U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service) (2004). Acipenser fulvescens. In: IUCN 2008. IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. Retrieved 23 February 2009.
  2. ^ Scott, W.B. and E.J. Crossman. 1972. Freshwater Fisheries of Canada. Fisheries Research Board of Canada, Department of the Environment, Ottawa. p. 82-89.
  3. ^ Scott, W.B. and E.J. Crossman. 1972. Freshwater Fisheries of Canada. Fisheries Research Board of Canada, Department of the Environment, Ottawa. p. 83-84.
  4. ^ http://www.toledoblade.com/StevePollick/2005/06/12/At-last-a-use-for-trashy-Erie-gobies-sturgeon-bait.html
  5. ^ Scott, W.B. and E.J. Crossman. 1972. Freshwater Fisheries of Canada. Fisheries Research Board of Canada, Department of the Environment, Ottawa. p. 87.
  6. ^ Scott, W.B. and E.J. Crossman. 1972. Freshwater Fisheries of Canada. Fisheries Research Board of Canada, Department of the Environment, Ottawa. p. 88.
  7. ^ Scott, W.B. and E.J. Crossman. 1972. Freshwater Fisheries of Canada. Fisheries Research Board of Canada, Department of the Environment, Ottawa. p. 88.
  8. ^ [1]
  9. ^ [2]

Original courtesy of Wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lake_sturgeon — Please support Wikipedia.
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148 news items

National Geographic

National Geographic
Sat, 18 May 2013 09:00:56 -0700

Topping six feet (two meters) long and weighing nearly 200 pounds (90 kilograms), lake sturgeon once roamed rivers and lakes of the Mississippi River, Hudson Bay, and the Great Lakes. Unchanged from prehistoric times, the lake sturgeon has unusual ...
 
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel (blog)
Mon, 22 Apr 2013 15:19:59 -0700

A 48-inch lake sturgeon was captured, tagged and released Monday in the Milwaukee River by Department of Natural Resources fisheries personnel. The fish was caught during a survey for walleye and northern pike in the lower river. Based on a right ...

Wall Street Journal

Wall Street Journal
Sun, 05 May 2013 16:08:23 -0700

Many sturgeon species around the world are threatened due to overfishing and poaching and are now heavily regulated because their eggs are sold as caviar. Lake sturgeon are considered threatened, endangered or of special concern in most of the states ...

The Shawano Leader

Battle Creek Enquirer
Sat, 27 Apr 2013 15:01:32 -0700

Each spring, mature lake sturgeon become especially vulnerable to illegal harvesting as they make their way out of the Black Lake in Cheboygan County to spawning sites in the Black River. / Darren Warner/For the Enquirer ...
 
Rochester City Newspaper (blog)
Sat, 18 May 2013 08:00:47 -0700

The presence of most toxic chemicals is down, beach closings have remained level, and populations of some native species, such as lake sturgeon, have begun to recover. But other problems, such as invasive species and nutrient pollution, still pose ...
 
Wisconsin State Journal
Sat, 11 May 2013 05:03:22 -0700

The lake sturgeon is a slow-growing, long-living, and late-maturing fish. The Lake Winnebago system has the largest natural reproducing lake sturgeon population in the world and its eggs are used for lake sturgeon reintroduction and rehabilitation ...
 
Brandon Sun
Thu, 02 May 2013 06:26:44 -0700

Kayla Creasy, a Natural Resource Management Technology student in The Pas, clutches a lake sturgeon while participating in a tagging operation. Catching and tagging the ancient fish is undertaken to monitor the species population in order to ensure its ...
 
Cheboygan Daily Tribune
Fri, 03 May 2013 21:02:05 -0700

A threatened species in Michigan, mature adult lake sturgeon from the Black Lake population briefly leave that body of water to swim upstream and seek places in the Upper Black River to spawn. The first of several spawning groups that travel up the ...
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