If you don’t mind me asking - what county in PA did you catch the wild bows?I’ve done it 4 times on the same day. None this year. I haven’t fished the streams where it is possible.
The streams where it is possible should probably have an extra layer of protection. About 3-4 years ago I found where AMD was entering the headwaters of one of these streams. The agency I eventually talked to never followed up with me.
The OP says Elk Co.If you don’t mind me asking - what county in PA did you catch the wild bows?
Couldn’t agree more. I’m always amazed at the difficulty some fisherman have at identifying wild trout.Most of the time I see what claims to be "wild" rainbows tends to be fingerling stockings. Wild rainbows rarely occur here in PA. Those fingerlings move a long distance from where they were stocked.
What are ways you'd determine between a fingerling stocked rainbow, especially one caught in streams that don't have known fingerling stocking programs, and a truly wild small 'bow?Most of the time I see what claims to be "wild" rainbows tends to be fingerling stockings. Wild rainbows rarely occur here in PA. Those fingerlings move a long distance from where they were stocked.
Studying the population with what intent regarding management?Lastly I I have a good friend who’s an ichthyologist and professor at PSU. After I shared my experience, he expressed interest in investigating the population further in a future study.
The majority of PFBC stocked rainbows are sterile females, and the remainder are fall spawning strains who’s eggs are very unlikely to survive the winter.I've done it in NCPA-but like you, the wild bow is what surprised me. I guess it shouldn't. If the state stocks rainbows over wild populations, it's inevitable that at some point, some of those fish will successfully spawn-even if the population never becomes established.
To estimate the population and study the geneticsStudying the population with what intent regarding management?
Would the goal be to increase wild rainbow populations? Or eradicate them? Or something else?