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<blockquote data-quote="Slappy" data-source="post: 412351" data-attributes="member: 7608"><p>It's been a while but my recollection of reading that study was that the fish were tagged in the spring around the same time as they were being caught and reported. They would need to tag on Oahe in late summer or fall for such a study to confirm big fish in Bismarck caught during spring swam upstream like walleye do in every river system I'm aware of.</p><p></p><p>Bad science = bad conclusions. Anyone claiming those fish don't move is a hack or a liar. The Sakakawea tagging study showed big fish moving over 50 miles in one month (April to June) from a bay in the river segment down to main lake. I have 2 of the certificates from NDGF showing this.</p><p></p><p>Rainy River. Maumee River. Fox River. It doesn't take an advanced biology degree to know fish of many species run up river to spawn. How a person holding such a degree could say otherwise is baffling.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Slappy, post: 412351, member: 7608"] It's been a while but my recollection of reading that study was that the fish were tagged in the spring around the same time as they were being caught and reported. They would need to tag on Oahe in late summer or fall for such a study to confirm big fish in Bismarck caught during spring swam upstream like walleye do in every river system I'm aware of. Bad science = bad conclusions. Anyone claiming those fish don't move is a hack or a liar. The Sakakawea tagging study showed big fish moving over 50 miles in one month (April to June) from a bay in the river segment down to main lake. I have 2 of the certificates from NDGF showing this. Rainy River. Maumee River. Fox River. It doesn't take an advanced biology degree to know fish of many species run up river to spawn. How a person holding such a degree could say otherwise is baffling. [/QUOTE]
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