Lower Shore: Duluth to Two Harbors
Surface water temps were 48-56 °F, but rainy, windy conditions limited angling activity this week. When fishing conditions were favorable, trolling bright stick baits and spoons 20-80 feet below the surface worked well. Anglers reported catching good numbers of 19-25 inch Lake Trout, some 16-18 inch Coho Salmon, and a few 20-28 inch Chinook Salmon. The St. Louis River Estuary Walleye bite was fairly consistent with sizes ranging from 14-24 inches. Anglers found success trolling stick baits and worm harnesses on the flats and jigging live bait on deeper structure.
Upper Shore: Twin Points to Hovland
Surface water temps were 36-38 °F this week. Fog and brisk winds kept angler pressure light from all stations. Most anglers targeted Lake Trout trolling bright glow spoons near deep structure, drop-offs, and flats, 100-200 feet down. A few anglers reported success using spoons and flasher combos in darker colored spoons and flasher fly combos a bit higher up to target suspended Lake Trout. Trolling near the surface or close to shore was unproductive for most anglers. Despite persistent cool water a few Coho and Chinook Salmon were caught from Silver Bay and Taconite Harbor, but in very low numbers. Shore anglers reported fair numbers of Brook Trout were in the harbors and marina areas with some nice sized fish caught.
Management Update: Lake Superior is Different!
Lake Superior is just different than the other Great Lakes…it’s bigger, deeper, colder, and is dominated by native predator and preyfish like lake trout, cisco, bloater, and kiyi. In an average year, Lake Superior surface temperatures are 3-9 ⁰ F colder than the other Great Lakes. The cold, deep waters and high abundance of native species helps prevent the establishment of invasive species like alewife, Eurasion ruffe, round goby, threespine stickleback, and zebra and quagga mussels.
If you have been on the water this year, you have noticed this has been a colder than normal spring and water temperatures are still very cold except closer to Duluth. Although it makes fishing for salmon a bit more difficult, it is a good “reset” for the system which in recent years has seen unusually warm waters extending as far into the year as late October when lake trout are typically spawning. Cold springs, especially cold water in June, is one driver of cisco year-class success which we had seen the past few years from the historic 2022 year-class. Because of the lack of alewife which is the preferred diet of salmon in the Great Lakes (especially Chinooks or Kings), juvenile cisco provide an incredible food source that we have seen produce record-breaking coho and enormous Chinooks.
The problem is that over the past 30 years, successful cisco year-classes have become smaller and further apart with only a few successful but very small year-classes being produced in a ten-year period likely due to warmer springtime water temperatures and a lack of ice-cover. These small year-classes do not produce enough fish to provide enough forage for salmon like we had seen from the 2022 historic year-class. Compared to lake trout that can live well over 15 years, salmon have a short life cycle and need ample forage to grow from a newly hatched fry to a spawning adult in only 3 to 4 years and in most years that is just not what Lake Superior provides. Coho have a bit more diverse diet strategy than Kings, which is likely why we see higher coho abundance, and lake trout are extremely opportunistic eaters that can shift their diets to whatever forage is available which is why they truly are built for Lake Superior and why anglers have enjoyed record catches the past two years.
Diversity in the fishery is a great thing and although cold years make for short summers here on the North Shore, they just might provide the forage we need to continue to enjoy this great fishery!
For more information, questions about fisheries management in Minnesota waters of Lake Superior, or to suggest a topic for a Management Update, please contact Lake Superior Fisheries Supervisor Cory Goldsworthy at cory.goldsworthy@state.mn.us or 218-302-3268.
NOAA CoastWatch: Great Lakes Surface Environmental Analysis (GLSEA)
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 Questions?
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