There is a fish that lives in the Mountain West, a salmonid with chrome flanks and gentle appearance. This fish feeds mostly on insects and small crustaceans and worms, and does sometimes rise to hatches. Not only is it good sport but it is fine table fare. Most fly fisherman who have fished for this elegant native fish speak very highly of it....
I'm kidding about that last part, the species I'm talking about today is the mountain whitefish, Prosopium williamsoni, and actually a lot of fly fisherman would be perfectly happy to never catch a mountain whitefish. I, of course, am not one of those types, so let's dive in and learn about the small-finned grayling itself, the fallfish of Montana, and try to discern what exactly it is that makes them unlikable (spoiler alert: there's no real legitimate reason they're so disliked).
Prosopium williamsoni |
Whitefish have much the same sort of habitat requirements as most other salmonids, cold, clean, well oxygenated water with healthy macroinvertebrate populations are necessary to sustain a population. Their overall body shape and fin arrangement is very trout like, but their slightly larger silvery scales and odd shaped face make them appear more like a cyprinid. The upper jaw of the mountain whitefish is much longer than their lower jaw, and looks sort of like a long shovel nose. This snout distinguishes them from other similar species, like cisco and lake whitefish. Mountain whitefish use their snout and pectoral fins to root in the bottom for food items.
A stretch of river in Montana home to numerous mountain whitefish. |
Throughout their range, mountain whitefish are an important forage fish for large predatory fish species both native and non-native, as well as birds of prey and some mammals. Historically, they have been an important food fish and game fish.
In 2016, low and warm waters in southern Montana, conditions tied to anthropogenic climate change, facilitated the spread of a parasite, Tetracapsuloides bryosalmonae. This parasite infected cutthroat, rainbow trout, longnose suckers, sculpins, and dace, but mountain whitefish were especially prone. Massive fish kills hit the Yellowstone River in particular hard, where fish already at risk of mortality from excessively warm waters succumbed to the parasite. Montana FWP temporarily shut down the Yellowstone River to all recreational activities. The impacts of the fish kill were still evident when I fished the area in late 2018. Whitefish numbers were exceptionally diminished.
The Yellowstone |
Really, the prejudices against whitefish held by a lot of fisherman today hearken back to the same sort of "trash fish" mentality that persists in any place people fish. Though "trash fish" was intended originally to refer to the food quality of a fish, it is now used to describe a plethora of wild fish with no regard to their natural importance or sporting qualities. Before whitefish were considered the undesirable species they are in the west today, it was bull trout. Bull trout were intentionally killed in huge number throughout their range, and exist now in highly diminished numbers. Though the prejudice against whitefish hasn't extended to that despicable level, it is harder to find voices advocating for the species than it is to find voices advocating for non-native brown trout, and that is unfortunate.
The mountain whitefish is an odd but beautiful little salmonid, and long may it swim the rivers and lakes of the mountain west.
Until next time,
Fish for the love of fish.
Fish for the love of places fish live.
Fish for you.
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Loving these species profiles, especially when they're about Whitefish! We gotta get out to try for Round Whitefish together at some point.
ReplyDeleteHas to happen. Such cool fish!
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