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Tim Smith

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Posts posted by Tim Smith

  1. Hi,

     

    Just dropping in to say how much I enjoyed being your neighbor at the Great Waters Expo. Overhearing you all weekend was wonderful. I was blown away by your great enthusiasm for conservation, restoration, and education.

     

    Luck was on my side ... Our chance proximity gave me a chance to meet some of you and discover more about your efforts - very nice!

     

    Kat

     

    Kathy, welcome to the boards and may I say I overheard quite a few positive things about you as well.

  2. Good Luck, Tim!! I hope you have a good report!!!

     

    There's a little note in the Central Fishing section, Mark. One big carp on the float and fly and that was about it.

     

    The rain didn't do much last night but water clarity seems to still be an issue in a lot of streams. Jonn says the Mac is still dirty and there was a little bump on the Salt Fork hydrograph this morning as well.

     

    Temperatures are still climbing, though. We'll have peaks over 10C next week at this rate.

  3. Chicago Botanic Garden's Conservation and Land Management Internship Program in collaboration with the Bureau of Land Management National Park Service and US Forest Service

     

    Would you like to gain hands-on experience through a paid internship in conservation biology and natural resource management?

     

    · 100 five-month paid internships for outstanding college graduates

     

    · Working with the Bureau of Land Management (BLM), National Park

    Service (NPS) and US Forest Service (USFS) predominantly in the western states

     

    · Intern duties may include:

     

     

    o Plant and animal monitoring and mapping

    o Endangered species reintroduction

    o Invasive species management

    o Geographic data acquisition and analysis

    o Biological assessments, sensitive species lists and conservation plans

     

    o Fire ecology

    o Land use planning

    o Archaeology-related activities

    o Recreation areas management

    o Rangeland assessments

    o Seed collection

     

     

    · Interns participate in a one-week training course held in late May in

    Chicago. Travel and lodging expenses will be covered. Training includes:

    o BLM/NPS/USFS orientation

    o Endangered Species Act and associated programs

    o Plant and animal identification and monitoring

    o GIS and mapping

    o Topographical map reading and GPS skills

     

    · $750 / pay period (every 2 weeks)

     

    · How to apply:

    o Send a letter of interest, official school transcript(s), resume, and

    three letters of recommendation to the address below by March 21, 2007.

    o International applicants must have a visa authorized for employment in

    the USA.

     

    · Pending funding, an optional extension may be offered to selected

    interns for an additional 5-month internship with the Department of Conservation

    and Environment (DEC) in Western Australia.

     

     

    Kristen Kordecki

    kkordecki@chicagobotanic.org

    Chicago Botanic Garden

    (847) 835-6954

    1000 Lake Cook Road

    www.chicagobotanic.org/research/conservation/blm/index.html

    Glencoe, IL 60022

  4. Field technicians – Fish and aquatic ecology in Idaho

     

    Summer employment for fish and aquatic ecology field assistants in the Frank

    Church River of No

    Return wilderness -- Field research technicians (1-2) are needed to assist a

    project on juvenile

    salmon ecology in the Frank Church River of No Return Wilderness, Idaho.

    Technicians will help

    quantify trophic relationships, growth rates and abundance of juvenile Chinook

    salmon and other

    fish in the aquatic community of the Big Creek drainage. Principle duties will

    include:

    electrofishing sample reaches, collecting fish stomach contents, sampling

    macroinvertebrates,

    quantifying aquatic habitat and conducting behavioral observations through

    snorkeling.

     

    Qualifications: Strong applicants will have experience in field biology,

    particularly in remote

    settings, and a high level of interest in fisheries and aquatic ecology. We are

    seeking applicants

    with enthusiasm for research in wilderness settings, who are in good physical

    condition, able and

    willing to traverse rough terrain, backpack with research equipment on trips up

    to 1.5 weeks, in a

    hot/dry climate. We will base at a wilderness field station for the entire

    summer with routine

    sampling trips away from camp. Ability to cooperate and get along with crew

    members for an

    extended time in the remote backcountry is a must.

     

    Schedule: Late May through mid- to late August, with some flexibility

     

    Compensation: A stipend of $2800-$3200, commensurate with education and

    experience.

    Research travel and lodging expenses covered.

     

    To apply: Please compose a cover letter addressing your interest and

    qualifications for the

    position and attach it to a resume, including contact information for at least 2

    professional

    references. Forward to the physical or electronic address listed below. These

    positions provide an

    excellent opportunity for valuable and diverse field experience in a beautiful

    setting; come join us

    for a fun and busy summer! Information on the research station is available at:

    http://

    www.cnrhome.uidaho.edu/taylorranch.htm. Applications will start being reviewed

    March 26.

     

    Kara Cromwell

    University of Idaho

    Department of Fish & Wildlife Resources

    PO Box 441136

    Moscow, ID 83844-1136

    crom8077@uidaho.edu

  5. Check out the temperature lows in the Salt Fork over the last few days...and those peaks! Toasty!!

     

    http://waterdata.usgs.gov/il/nwis/uv?03336900

     

    I've used float and fly (we called it "jiggerbobbing" where I come from) for crappie and I've used it on the Middle Fork but never to target smallies specifically. I have a couple of Jonn's jigs and I don't think I can stand waiting too many more days. If the weather can just hold out a bit, this will be my first try for cold water float and fly smallies.

  6. Tim: did you make it home in one piece?

     

    Thanks for asking Jude, and thanks to Mark Hedger I did make it home alive. Fortunately, the snow and ice weren't bad after the first 1.5 to 2 hours. I made it home about 1 a.m. Mark must have hit the door at about 2a.m..

     

    I agree it's a tribute to the group as a whole that in spite of some nasty weather the Blowout was just as big a success as ever. The years of groundwork, talent, foresight and just plain elbow grease (yes, especially by Jim and Scott) were fully apparent last night. Rich did a great job running the show his first time around. That was also the first Jonn Graham talk I've seen. I was truly impressed. Don's DVD's were quite the eye-opener as well.

  7. Michael, we did have a split decision and the contest was close but you captured the madtom profile and color perfectly.

     

    That fly passed the "glance" test with flying colors. If you were looking for a madtom and your eyes swept over the group of flies, yours was the one that consistently drew the eye of the observer. It looked the most like a madtom to 2 of the 3 judges and IDNR biologist Dan Sollee, who has also seen quite a few madtoms. The dissenting opinion also liked your fly and had it ranked 2nd.

     

    However, we DO need a tank test next year. Last year's silverside was innovative, but its' hydrodynamics were those of a straightforward streamer. This year, some of the designs that didn't win were potentially brilliant, but impossible to evaluate. Several of the innovations included in those ties would imparted a complex movement in the water. Standing there at the table, it was impossible to know how well those would have worked. Next year we need to the contestants to submit 2 flies of the same pattern and then test one of them in the tank.

     

    An even better (but logistically difficult) test would be to test these flies against each other in the field. Even if some of those ties weren't the most faithful mimic of a madtom, they may easily have been the most effective fish catchers...

     

    ...and this year we really want some forum pictures of fish caught on these flies!!!

  8. The moon issue is still interesting. It seems to me there are quite a few researchers who have made their names by formally studying "myths". The progress from myth, to data to printed page is still a slow one in ecology. Something like that might have been studied and then turned down by the journal reviewers...who's logical processes can be inscrutible at times.

     

    I think by Blandingii acutus you mean Procambarus acutus. Here's a picture of those. They like siltier bottoms and are more common in lakes. They're very similar to, and often live together with Procambarus clarkii, the aquacultural species that supports the cajun food industry down there.

     

     

     

    Most of these are O. virilis. The one with the blue chela in the middle is an O. virilis. The one with the greenish mottled chela just below it is O. immunis. The colors for all these species becomes more pronounced when they have high protein diets.

     

     

  9. Seems I've read about studies showing preferred crawfish size which is generally small (2-2.5 inches)

     

    Would this be because smaller craws are younger craws and molting more?

     

    They are molting more often, yes, but the smaller ones also put up less of a fight and have less effective claws for fighting.

     

    Bass do eat hardshells, just not as readily.

  10. Crawbugs seem to work pretty well year round, so who knows what's what with the whole molting issue?

     

    It all depends on growth.

     

    If an exoskeleton is getting tight, a crayfish will molt. Most of that happens in the spring. A few of the older stragglers give it a whirl later in the year. In their first year of life, when growth is rapid, crayfish are molting constantly.

    I've also pulled plenty of hardshelled crayfish out of bass guts (non-destructive diet analysis after electrofishing surveys) but they're generally smaller proportional to the bass than the ones pictured here. I believe your "testing" hypothesis, but I suspect that's more true for larger crayfish than smaller ones.

  11.  

     

    Mr. Engbretson kindly forwarded some additional pictures of smallmouth bass consuming crayfish.

     

    The crayfish species on the bottom left is a common one in Illinois, the Northern crayfish (Orconectes virilis). I think the one being caught off a log is a rusty. I'm not sure about the one in the upper left...probably a rusty too.

     

    Definitely check out Eric's site. Very, very cool pictures all 'round. I get the impression Eric is doing this as a business, so if you use the pics, be sure to pay.

  12. Hey Jude...You'll find clusters of molts in late spring that lead me to believe the molts are often done close together in time. I don't think it's quite as tight as a mayfly hatch, but there would be advantages for the crayfish if it were. Spring is a big growth time when forage is abundant and temperatures are ideal.

     

    Jamie, it has been my experience that crayfish spawn whenever and wherever they can. I've collected them in buckets from the bottom of drained ponds during the fall and summer and sometimes they'll be locked up together then (I have a picture of that some where, but this is a family forum after all). Maybe there's MORE spawning during the full moon? I've never heard anything along those lines. Where did you hear that?

  13. i have often heard the lake michigan perch guys talk of using soft shells> is this a phase that happens around the full moon too. how often do they change their hard cover?

     

    Soft shells happen after a crayfish "molts" or sheds its outer shell. After a molt they are soft and rubbery (you can even bend their claws and legs like rubber). During that time they are easily eaten by predators of all sorts including each other.

     

    I'm not aware of any connection to phases of the moon, but I suppose it's possible. The thing that definitely drives crayfish molts is growth. Very young crayfish molt every few weeks until their growth levels off. Adult crayfish tend to molt once in late May or June. Some species may molt more often than that, but most grow slowly in the later stages of their lives.

  14. ...I was curious enough to e-mail the photographer and here is his reply.

     

    Hi Timothy,

     

    Thanks for your kind words and interest in my fish pictures.

    As I recall, the smallmouth in the picture did in fact briefly pick up that rusty crayfish. But he dropped it almost immediately, and swam away.

    After years of viewing the interaction between crayfish and smallmouth bass, I've come to learn that they will not eat adult crayfish during the hard shell period. As you may know, crayfish go through a molting process periodically when they shed their exoskeleton or outside shell. After this process, the new shell is soft, but gradually hardens. When the shell is in the hard condition, smallmouth avoid eating them. I'm not sure why. They absolutely love them however, when they're in the soft shell phase.

    Also, although I can't tell the difference with my eyes, the bass can almost always determine if the shell is hard or soft. I cannot determine weather they do this by sight or by smell. I've seen evidence that would support the notion that both senses are capable of this detection.

    It's all pretty interesting.

    Anyway, a long answer to your question.

     

    I will go to your website and check it out.

     

    Thanks again for your email. Nice hearing from you.

     

    Eric Engbretson

    Engbretson Underwater Photo

  15. I'd like to know the back story...

     

    ...does the smallie catch this crayfish?

     

    I'd give even odds. This pass looks like a likely miss. The smallie has a closed mouth and the crayfish is in cover and looks to be rotating fast to get it's claws in position to fight. That's a pretty big crayfish for that size of smallmouth too...can't see enough to be sure, but from the size and the black bands on the claws it looks like it might be a rusty crayfish too...very nasty species.

     

    Who wins this battle, Jim?

  16. The Bug really went over great. Showed and gave it to a lot of people and got excellent responses. Holschlag said they sold very well and he'll probably want more for his next show. Skip Morris really liked it, as did Dennis Potter, who was VERY encouraging.

     

    Jude was also gracious enough to make the Jude Bug available to new ISA sign ups. That was a generous gesture that was well received. I thought it made a very positive statement about what the ISA is all about.

  17. what timing. the Jude bug is the fly featured in the newsletter. they will also be available as part of the fly raffle at the blowout. nice going jude.

     

    Jude is going to get a reputation as a fly tier at this rate.

     

    The resume is getting longer and more prestigious every year.

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