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Flathead growth rate
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<blockquote data-quote="dennishoddy" data-source="post: 1809269" data-attributes="member: 5412"><p>Interesting data. Wonder how data collected in 1953 would compare to today in those same lakes. The majority of our reservoirs were not even constructed back then. </p><p>I saw the method of collection was rotenone vs today's method of electro fishing. </p><p>I was involved in using rotenone in Lake Ponca. The rough fish had taken over the lake so the ODW and Ponca decided to kill the lake and restock. </p><p>I was a kid, riding in the boat with my dad. We got 5 gal containers of liquid rotenone, and drove around the lake pouring it in the prop wash. Thousands of fish came to the surface and died, but the kill wasn't complete as the liquid didn't go to the bottom. A month or so later we did it again with pellets in burlap sacks drug around the bottom of the lake.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="dennishoddy, post: 1809269, member: 5412"] Interesting data. Wonder how data collected in 1953 would compare to today in those same lakes. The majority of our reservoirs were not even constructed back then. I saw the method of collection was rotenone vs today's method of electro fishing. I was involved in using rotenone in Lake Ponca. The rough fish had taken over the lake so the ODW and Ponca decided to kill the lake and restock. I was a kid, riding in the boat with my dad. We got 5 gal containers of liquid rotenone, and drove around the lake pouring it in the prop wash. Thousands of fish came to the surface and died, but the kill wasn't complete as the liquid didn't go to the bottom. A month or so later we did it again with pellets in burlap sacks drug around the bottom of the lake. [/QUOTE]
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