Indiana is not slated to get any of the 450k increase in Chinook. Michigan is only slated for about 150k. The rest goes to Wisconsin.
This is incorrect per preliminary discussions I have been informed of. But we obviously won't know until the lake committee makes their final decision. Indiana is not going to be ok (nor should any state) with a lakewide stocking increase that does not result in ALL states getting some type of increase. Frankly, if there is any increase, anything outside of every state getting at least some increase would be bullshit, not to be too blunt.
Indiana anglers do not benefit at all from Lake Huron chinook stocking, they simply do not migrate down and contribute to the fishery in the south (based upon CWT data).
Actually based on the CWT data, during the spring and summer fishery, Indiana anglers catch just as many Lake Huron kings as they do Indiana kings. Obviously that's not true in the fall, since all the Lake Huron fish are not down here, but rather way up north/in Huron
I've made plenty of posts in the past debunking the "Indiana gets the short end of the stick" argument when it comes to silver fish. We stock more per area than any other state.
Nature has given us the short end of the stick in terms of survival. Even our coho returns have dwindled significantly. Steelhead are about the only thing that have not tanked in survival, and have been giving us good returns to our terminal fisheries
I'm also not interested in rehashing the whole lake huron thing - it's been beat to death. That is a decision in which the lake committees for both lakes will have to decide. There's no playbook for that, I don't think there's ever been a situation like this in the history of Great Lakes management.
IF those Huron kings that mostly are supported by Lake Michigan forage (fully agree with Bloodrun, hard to argue with this given all available evidence) are moved from Lake Huron over to Lake Michigan (pointless to speculate until it would/might happen) then it certainly makes a lot of sense in my eyes for them to be distributed among the southern basin. I fully agree that since Lake Michigan is including the Lake Huron kings in the predator prey model that guides Lake Michigan management, that it sure would be nice if they were *actually* Lake Michigan fish rather than planted in Huron. But, again - nothing I can do about that until there is a decision hashed out between the lake committees.
I have lots of ideas to increase fall return in Indiana and hopefully they can come to fruition both politically and biologically in the near future. We do plant quite a few cohos, but the problem is that outside of the St. Joe River stocking, they are fall fingerlings and they have not been surviving as well as they did in the past. I would like to really shake up our stocking program and be able to stock coho as spring yearlings, like we switched to on the St. Joe. That has paid huge dividends and would likely do so for our other stocking locations. But it will require some significant changes to our stocking program. And it would mean stocking *fewer* cohos than we do currently, but they would survive much better and give us a better overall return.
In addition to that, I'd really like to get back to stocking more kings and making sure they can be stocked at 3 ports again. But, I'm sure no matter what there will be people upset by whichever course of management is decided upon