Press Release: Vermont Fish & Wildlife To Stock Muskellunge Fingerlings In Lake Champlain

Vermont Fish & Wildlife will be stocking over 5,000 muskellunge fingerlings in the Missisquoi River

WANTON, VT – Vermont Fish & Wildlife will be stocking over 5,000 muskellunge fingerlings in the Missisquoi River and Missisqoui Bay in Swanton on Tuesday, August 25, as part of the Department’s ongoing Lake Champlain muskellunge restoration initiative.

“Muskie are native to Lake Champlain and once played an important role as the top predatory species in the lake,” said Shawn Good, fisheries biologist with Vermont Fish & Wildlife, who’s spearheading the project. “It’s really exciting to be part of the effort to bring this fish back to the lake, not only for its important role in the lake’s aquatic ecosystem, but also for the fishing opportunities it will provide in the future for Vermont anglers.”

Fish & wildlife specialist Dave Gibson with a muskie caught during past fisheries sampling work.
Fish & wildlife specialist Dave Gibson with a muskie caught during past fisheries sampling work.

Muskellunge can grow to be one of the largest freshwater gamefish in the country, often exceeding 50 inches in length and 50 pounds in weight. However, Good says that it’s their aggressiveness that really makes muskie such a desirable sportfish.

“Muskies hold a special place in the hearts of anglers who’ve caught one,” said Good. “Often, catching just their first muskie ever is enough to turn someone into a lifelong muskie addict!”

Muskie are fabled for their vicious strikes and powerful runs during battle, and the species has a tendency to leap acrobatically out of the water during a fight.

“Imagine having a 30 or 40 pound smallmouth bass on the end of your line,” said Good. “That’s what it’s like to hook a muskie.”

Muskellunge are one of four species of esocids (pike family) native to Vermont along with northern pike, chain pickerel and redfin pickerel. Lake Champlain and its tributaries are the only locations in New England that historically supported natural muskellunge populations.

Although the native Lake Champlain muskie population was once widespread, it began to decline in the 1970’s, and is thought to have been extirpated completely from the lake following a paper mill spill in the Missisquoi River in the late 1970’s.

Fisheries biologist Shawn Good loads muskellunge fingerlings into the stocking boat
Fisheries biologist Shawn Good loads muskellunge fingerlings into the stocking boat during a previous stocking effort.
“This week’s stocking effort is another step toward returning this great species to Lake Champlain, and the Missisquoi River,” Good said.

Vermont Fish & Wildlife has been conducting annual muskie stocking activities since 2008, and have released over 38,000 muskie into the lake since then.

The six-inch long muskie fingerlings, which will be stocked on Tuesday at multiple locations throughout the Missisquoi River and Missisquoi Bay, are being provided through a cooperative effort by the New York Department of Environmental Conservation. The fish are raised at NYDEC’s Prendergast Hatchery on Chautauqua Lake in western New York.

To learn more about Vermont’s fisheries management programs and fishing in Vermont, visit http://www.vtfishandwildlife.com

3 comments on Press Release: Vermont Fish & Wildlife To Stock Muskellunge Fingerlings In Lake Champlain
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3 responses to “Press Release: Vermont Fish & Wildlife To Stock Muskellunge Fingerlings In Lake Champlain”

  1. frank kurant

    Awesome,I hope many survive and that they don’t just become Cormorant food.

  2. Walter Collins

    Would love to see the same program for Lake Memphramaog .

  3. Musky Man

    They should put larger yearlings in the lake instead. Those six inchers are nothing more than Pike food and like Frank said, bird food…

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