The
coaster brook trout (Salvelinus fontinalis)
is an anadramous for of brook trout that spends part of its life in
the nearshore waters of the upper Great Lakes. Once abundant and widespread,
they are big, colorful, highly sought after sport fish willing to hit
flies, live and artificial baits. Historically, most of Lake Superior's
3,000 miles of shoreline and tributary streams supported fishable coaster
populations. In the mid-1800s, the fishery attracted anglers from around
the world, and unregulated fishing decimated coaster stocks. In-stream
habitat loss due to wide-scale logging further reduced numbers and prevented
stocks from recovering. By the mid-1900s only a handful of tiny remnant
stocks still existed.
Service biologists worked
with staff from resource agencies in Canada and the U.S. to develop
a Brook
Trout Rehabilitation Plan (pdf, 233 Kb) for Lake Superior.The plan
calls for protection and rehabilitation of coasters in as many of their
original habitats as possible. Resource agencies gather information
from the remaining wild populations. To bring back the "little
salmon of the springs" three approaches are being used: protection
from overharvesting of remaining stocks; rehabilitation of spring-fed
areas of streams; and, redesign or removal of dams blocking access to
those streams.
The Service has surveyed
Isle Royale National
Park coaster populations in Lake Superior since 1993. Much of the
work has been conducted in association with egg collection from coaster
populations in Tobin Harbor and Siskiwit Bay. Eggs are collected and
brought to national fish hatcheries to serve as a "safety deposit
box" and preserve the genetic material of
remnant populations and for development of broodstocks.
Service employees collected wild coaster eggs on Isle Royale National
Part to develop captive spawning populations capable of restoring this
species to Lake Superior waters.
In
2001, approximately 205,000 coasters were stocked in streams in
Michigan at Isle Royale and Pictured
Rocks National Lakeshore as well as on the Keweenaw Bay Indian
Community. Biologists
are also coordinating with the U.S.D.A.
Forest Service and the Michigan
Department of Natural Resources to develop a sampling and analysis
plan for coaster brook trout in northern Lake Michigan.
Field Offices Involved
in Coaster Brook Trout Restoration
Ashland
Fishery Resources Office, WI | Iron
River National Fish Hatchery, WI | Genoa National
Fish Hatchery, WI
Links to More Information
Status
of Brook Trout in Lake Superior | Great
Lakes Fishery Commission's Lake Superior Technical Committee | National
Park Service