Maybe I missed it but did the article mention what caused the severe decline in Yellow Sally abundance and if that can be reversed? (...clean aerated water, with an optimal flow, limiting specific insecticides...)MSN
www.msn.comSweet. Hope it works out.
I wish them luck. The section of a local river I fished yesterday was a mile of almost nothing a decade ago. Now with work it's full of stones and fish. Finding the why and correcting it works.Maybe I missed it but did the article mention what caused the severe decline in Yellow Sally abundance and if that can be reversed? (...clean aerated water, with an optimal flow, limiting specific insecticides...)
Don't think so, but that would be wise of them to identify the limiting factor(s) prior to trying to re-establish the population.Maybe I missed it but did the article mention what caused the severe decline in Yellow Sally abundance and if that can be reversed? (...clean aerated water, with an optimal flow, limiting specific insecticides...)
What kind of work was done Tom?I wish them luck. The section of a local river I fished yesterday was a mile of almost nothing a decade ago. Now with work it's full of stones and fish. Finding the why and correcting it works.
They took a levee back about 100', graded out the incised channel, added meanders, braids, woody structure (jams and flow slowing in high water structures), and then planted native vegetation. This was after years of study and planning.What kind of work was done Tom?
"Took the levee back about 100' " is absolutely music to my ears.They took a levee back about 100', graded out the incised channel, added meanders, braids, woody structure (jams and flow slowing in high water structures), and then planted native vegetation. This was after years of study and planning.