Jeff Reardon
Well-known member
I was thinking about last night while googling Montana air fares and rental houses for next year's Yellowstone trip.
A similar situation exists with rainbow trout/cutthroat trout hybrids in western rivers where cutts are native and rainbows are introduced. This is a major conservation issue in some native cutt strongholds, and in some cases there is no size or bag limit on rainbows, or even mandatory kill.
In Yellowstone, within the "Native Trout Conservation Areas", you are required to kill any rainbow trout. This raises the need to distinguish between rainbows, cutts, and hybrids. Their clear rule is that any fish exhibiting a "slash" under the jaw is counted as a cutt and must be released. Those that don't have this are to be killed.
Now all we need is development of shot loads that allow catch-and-release duck hunting and we can have the same clarity for blacks and mallards. LOL.
A similar situation exists with rainbow trout/cutthroat trout hybrids in western rivers where cutts are native and rainbows are introduced. This is a major conservation issue in some native cutt strongholds, and in some cases there is no size or bag limit on rainbows, or even mandatory kill.
In Yellowstone, within the "Native Trout Conservation Areas", you are required to kill any rainbow trout. This raises the need to distinguish between rainbows, cutts, and hybrids. Their clear rule is that any fish exhibiting a "slash" under the jaw is counted as a cutt and must be released. Those that don't have this are to be killed.
Now all we need is development of shot loads that allow catch-and-release duck hunting and we can have the same clarity for blacks and mallards. LOL.