Apr 1, 2019 | By: Anthony Scott

Anglers Can Keep Bigger Walleye From Upper Red Lake This Season

While anglers fishing Upper Red Lake this spring will again be able to keep four walleye, a change in the size regulation will allow them to take one fish over 20 inches.

Since May 2017, the regulation allowed anglers to keep four fish with only one over 17 inches. Adjusting the one-over size to 20 inches will put more mature females within the allowed four-fish bag limit during the open water season that begins Saturday, May 11. Under the new regulation, anglers will be able to keep four walleye under 20 inches, or a combination of three walleye under 20 inches and one over 20 inches.

“We’re using the new regulation to let anglers remove surplus spawning stock, which hasn’t sufficiently happened under the previous regulation,” said Gary Barnard, Department of Natural Resources Bemidji area fisheries supervisor. “The DNR will likely adjust the regulation following the 2019 open water season, after anglers remove the surplus of mature female walleye.”

The previous regulation resulted in harvest of approximately 234,000 pounds for the 2018 harvest year. While this harvest level was a record high for any year since reopening the lake to walleye fishing in 2006, it was still short of the target harvest range for the lake’s surplus spawning stock condition. That level of harvest has not been effective in reducing spawning stock toward the desired optimal condition of 2.5-4.5 pounds per acre.

“The revised harvest plan recommends an aggressive approach when walleye spawning stock is in surplus, as it is currently,” Barnard said. “Anglers can expect a return to more restrictive size or bag limits in future seasons once spawning stock is managed to more desirable levels.”

More information about Red Lake fishing regulations is available at mndnr.gov/regulations/fishing.

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