A New Year, With New Projects
I went out today and last Sunday on two different projects. Last week we attempted to start Candice's project, to monitor flame chub reproductive biology. Flames seem to spawn earlier than most other local cyprinids, so it seemed to be a good idea to pick some up in January. A big potential problem this time of year is that of course streams are higher, with lower temperatures and no leaves on trees to suck up water. But, we went to Little Paint Rock Creek in Marshall County and Larkin Fork of the Paint Rock River in Jackson County. At Little Paint Rock Creek we caught one female flame chub, along with large numbers of blacknosed dace and bluntnose minnows. The one basin at this site where I've typically caught flame chubs had deep water with lots of sediments on the bottom, not a good combination for any kind of netting. And Larkin Fork had more water in it than I've seen before. The specific site we visited is my "guaranteed" flame chub site, with fish in a small rivulet flowing from a spring field under the road and down in to the Fork. On our visit, the spring field was a flowing creek for several hundred meters, almost knee deep. We caught dace in these areas, along with bluntnose minnows and striped shiners, but nary a flame chub. So, hopefully we'll get out next Sunday with lower water if the rain holds off a bit.
Here's a photo of the county road running along Larkin Fork, with my "sweet spot" in the middle.
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Here's an upstream view of the creek today, with our riffle driftnet just about dead in the middle of the image. You might see the two dowels sticking up, or the white of the top crossbar of the net. A nice thing about Borden Creek is being able to drive the dowels in to a sandy bottom, unlike the Flint River.
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Here's the downstream, "glide" site net in position in slightly deeper water. A pretty violent riffle starts just downstream from it, with whitewater running over some big rocks at the top of the riffle. Measured current velocity at this site was about 0.1 m/s, and flow at the upper site was about 0.25 m/s, both tame by the standards of the Flint River last winter.
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