Red River Salmon was listed on the 1880 menu of the Pacific
Hotel in Winnipeg. Although the fresh fish made an excellent
meal, it was in fact catfish, not salmon.
Years ago, when killing was the way sportfishers kept score
of their performances, anglers from as far south as Alabama
would come to Manitoba to fish in the Red River. They went
home in their pickup trucks packed with crushed ice and dead
catfish.
Today, most sportfishers prefer to release their catches alive,
perhaps keeping a picture of their catch as proof for their
friends back home. But the Red River has maintained its reputation
as the home of channel catfish with the biggest average size
in the world. The city of Selkirk calls itself the "Catfish
Capital of World."
Fork-tailed and powerful, channel catfish feed on minnows
in the faster flows of the river.
Dr. Ken Stewart, a zoologist of the University of Manitoba,
captures the Red's channel catfish, but not with a worm on
a hook hanging from a bamboo pole. Stewart and his researchers
catch the fish in nets set under the winter ice. They weigh
them, measure them, and fit them with small but powerful radio
transmitters before setting them free.
From low-flying aircraft, Stewart tracks the released fish
by picking up signals from the radio transmitters attached
to their backs. Some of the big catfish would travel from the
United States border all the way to Lake Winnipeg in only three
days.
Analyzing the health and size of the catfish population is
a way to measure the overall quality of the river as a habitat
for fish.
There are more than 50 species of fish in the Red, most of
them the same as the fish found in the upper reaches of the
Mississippi which starts in the same area but flows south.
The Red flows north, starting in the state of South Dakota
and ending in Lake Winnipeg, nearly 900 kilometres later. The
water is clean all the way to Winnipeg. Unfortunately, Winnipeg's
sewer system is inadequate and often dumps raw sewage directly
into the flow.
Still, the water is healthy enough downstream from Winnipeg
to keep prized fishing spots in operation. Lockport, where
Dr. Stewart conducts much of his research, is one of these
fishing spots.
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