Local Fish Species Rainbow by Kathy Davis
Chaffee County Times
Buena Vista
While brown trout make up 90 percent of the Arkansas River’s
trout population, a small population of rainbows provides anglers with
an occasional
surprise catch. The Arkansas rainbows are all stocked by the Division of Wildlife.
They are bred from wild fish and so carry the vivid coloring and red
stripe
so prized by anglers. They are stocked as fingerlings, large enough to
be largely immune to whirling disease but small enough to develop wild
instincts. Despite predation from larger browns, some of these fingerlings do
grow to as large as 20 inches on the primarily insect diet this river
affords.
They tend to be caught in cooler and more highly aerated fast water than
are browns. Rainbow populations throughout the West have been hit hard
by whirling disease, an introduced parasite transmitted by tubifex worms.
Although the Arkansas River was the original river determined to be a
whirling disease habitat, whirling disease has not had an impact on the
rainbow
populations. Management of whirling disease includes fish habitat and
hatcheries. The policy of The Division is to stock with negative fish.
Hatcheries have
switched to using spring water. The only hatchery using surface water
is Chalk Cliffs Rearing Unit. Stocking fish from this hatchery are transported
to waters that are non-habitat for rainbows, mainly on the eastern plains
of Colorado. Browns, originally imported from Western Europe where the
disease is endemic, are largely immune to the disease’s skeletal
deformity and neurological damage. Whirling disease, along with the spring
timing of the rainbow spawn and corresponding fry emergence coinciding
with spring runoff, makes natural reproduction ineffective for rainbows.
They are in the river, though, and can grow to good size. And their vibrant
colors will put a smile of appreciation on any angler’s face. Cutthroat Greenback cutthroats are a secret gem of some Arkansas basin high lakes
and streams. One of four original trout species in Colorado, greenbacks
were severely over-fished by early settlers, almost to the point of extinction.
They were out-competed and/or hybridized by non-native trout. In fact,
greenbacks were listed as an extinct species in 1937 before two small
populations were discovered in northern Colorado. Since then, a prolonged process of removing non-native trout from certain
lakes and streams and reintroducing greenbacks has led to a remarkable
recovery. In fact, greenbacks have been downgraded from near extinct
to threatened status. Greenbacks are found in the Rock Creek drainage,
due west of the Leadville fish hatchery. They are also found in Lake
Fork Creek drainage above Turquoise Reservoir and Middle Fork of the
South Arkansas River from Boss Lake upstream. Many high lakes support
populations of what the Division of Wildlife terms “recreational
greenbacks,” hybrids whose genetics are primarily greenback but
not the pure strain that has been the recovery effort’s focus.
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