Fishhook Flea infestation
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- Posts: 14
- Joined: Wed Sep 14, 2011 4:34 pm
- Species: cold water
Re: Fishhook Flea infestation
Fished around Sister Islands this afternoon...Fleas unmanageable. Prolly will hang it up for a while.
Re: Fishhook Flea infestation
Just bought some 50 lb, Spinner says it works. What the hell, I'll give it a try.
Re: Fishhook Flea infestation
Seems the fleas are worse in the stiller water
Re: Fishhook Flea infestation
Maybe, but I was hammerd in 2 and 3 footers last weekend.Fishawk wrote:Seems the fleas are worse in the stiller water
Re: Fishhook Flea infestation
I am wondering if the exponential increase in flea numbers equates to the rising levels of nutrients, fecal matter, and bacteria that the Lake is suffering? I have posed this question to James at LCI and waiting for his response. Anybody else with knowledge?
- BottomDollar
- Posts: 601
- Joined: Tue Sep 03, 2013 9:09 pm
- Species: cold water
- Location: Burlington
Re: Fishhook Flea infestation
I think they're just a new invasive and this is pretty much how it's going to be in the summer.C-Hawk wrote:I am wondering if the exponential increase in flea numbers equates to the rising levels of nutrients, fecal matter, and bacteria that the Lake is suffering? I have posed this question to James at LCI and waiting for his response. Anybody else with knowledge?
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- Posts: 16
- Joined: Sat Oct 22, 2011 9:00 am
- Species: 'locks
- Location: east coast
Re: Fishhook Flea infestation
Invasive not related to run off or sewage.
They consume the food needed to support alewife, perch and other fish. But researchers have seen fish populations feeding on them, so remains to be seen what the long term impact is...but been in Great Lakes for years.
From NY
Researchers have observed that chinook salmon, walleye, white bass, alewife, yellow and white perch, emerald and spottail shiner, and lake whitefish consume Bythotrephes.
They consume the food needed to support alewife, perch and other fish. But researchers have seen fish populations feeding on them, so remains to be seen what the long term impact is...but been in Great Lakes for years.
From NY
Researchers have observed that chinook salmon, walleye, white bass, alewife, yellow and white perch, emerald and spottail shiner, and lake whitefish consume Bythotrephes.