When is trout season in ny
DEC biologists concluded that fishing during the spawning season will not result in negative fishery impacts. DEC biologists will use the results of the study to evaluate the new regulation and guide future management. Anglers are reminded to use best practices when releasing fish to ensure trout are returned to the stream immediately and unharmed.
The map provides anglers with a one-stop-shop for information about stocking, fishing access, season dates, and regulations. DEC encourages anglers to use this resource before hitting the water, so they are aware of all the trout stream fishing opportunities available to them both locally and afar. Anglers interested in receiving information about fishing and fisheries management in New York can subscribe to the Fishing Line Newsletter. I like this idea and it does provide additional opportunities, especially in the fall.
I very much favor releasing fish in a careful manner, except if you want a couple to eat. My hang up is that it seems like the state is moving more and more away from stocking Adirondack ponds with brook trout, instead using brown trout. Is it because they are easier or cheaper to rear. Years ago DEC used to stock rainbow trout in lake george, and it was a nice fishery, both in the lake as well as the tributary streams.
Instead they went with stocking land locked salmon, and that program has never done very well. The state is not stocking brown trout in lieu of brook trout in the ponds. There was a practice started back in the 90s where ponds with high populations of golden shiners were stocked with both brook and brown trout but even most of those have been discontinued.
Also, you will note that every year the state stocks another ponds that were formerly acid rain dead as these lakes slowly recover. So in reality, more ponds are being stocked now with brook trout than any point in recent memory. Overall, DEC is going in the right direction with their fishery management—favoring science over economics…But there is still a ways to go. Sure, we need to be stocking heavily fished waters, but air-dropping hatchery raised brook trout into remote lakes that seldom see any anglers has not just been wasteful, it has potentially threatened unknown native populations.
There was even the black swan of the zebra mussel infestation at the hatchery a couple of years ago—thankfully they caught that one! Without the remote stocking program, there would be a fraction of the brook trout fishery that we have today. Based on those metrics, they are stocking ponds with the idea that naturally reproducing populations can be established and stocking no longer needed. Also, several ponds this past year were removed from the stocking list as they are showing sufficient natural reproduction to support the fishery.
Scott, you seem very knowledgeable on the subject. Even bushwhacking for a few days, I have not even come close reaching some of the ponds that they are stocking.
Maybe people do visit them, but my point is that angler harvest cannot be far above zero for all intensive purposes how would you even begin to conduct a creel survey out there? Yet, DEC has picked a side and they are sticking with it—at least for now—despite a known faction of the public that is opposed.
There are so many holes in our understanding of Adirondack freshwater ecosystems, even considering all data that DEC could possibly have accumulated since the s. Firstly, from a genetics perspective: There have been confirmed cases of hatchery-genetics finding their way into known Adirondack heritage-strain populations, and new heritage trout strains may very well remain to be discovered. It is also important to realize that even heritage strains propagated through hatcheries will ultimately diverge behaviorally and genetically from their progenitors.
Secondly, ecology: Even in acidified lakes, there are still ecosystems. Invertebrates certainly, and often an assemblage any of the hundreds of native fish species that are oft overlooked, remain to be impacted by our stocking practices.
Introducing hundreds or thousands of hatchery trout per year, even if natural mortality is exceptionally high, will effect the long-term invertebrate and vertebrate ecology of any watershed.
And the ultimate question remains: Even if we think that we know that there are no existing native brook trout populations in some waters, how do we even know that brook trout ever existed there in the first place acid rain is only part of the story?
Enter email address:. New York State has some of the finest fishing in the country. There is world class fishing for a wide variety of coldwater and warmwater fish species. Whether it's smallmouth bass fishing on Lake Erie, brook trout fishing on a crystal clear Adirondack lake, Pacific salmon fishing on Lake Ontario, fishing for stripers on the Hudson River, brown trout fishing on the Beaver Kill or fishing for bluefish in Montauk's surf, there's something special here for everyone.
With more than 7, lakes and ponds, 70, miles of rivers and streams, and hundreds of miles of coastline, fishing opportunities are always nearby!
Find your next adventure using DECinfo Locator - an interactive map featuring public fishing rights, parking areas, boat launches, wildlife management areas, and other information to help you plan your fishing trip. Fishing Reefs. Multiple information layers can be activated at the same time, allowing users to see the many ways DEC is working to protect and enhance the state's environment and recreational opportunities. New for , DEC streamlined its annual fishing regulations guide. With few exceptions, contents in the new guide are limited to only a summary of the laws and regulations anglers need to know before hitting the water.
Taking a no-frills approach, ads and articles have been omitted, allowing for a better formatting and simpler lookup. Waterbodies are now listed alphabetically by region to make looking up regulations easier. The simpler approach also allowed DEC to significantly increase the size of print for easier reading.
The new guide can be found at DEC's website for downloading and printing at home. Hard copies can be requested by emailing FWFish dec.
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