Our Maine Street's Aroostook Issue 8 : Spring 2011 | Page 22

Smelt Enforcement Story by Eric Rudolph Photos by Maine Warden Service It is a scene played out countless times over the course of the spring. The setting is a clear moonlit night along a small brook anywhere in the state. Snow and ice can still be found on the banks and the stream is engorged by spring run-off. There is hardly any room for the water to pass in the little brook because it is filled from bank to bank with a whirling black mass of smelts. In the dim light, two men walk along the stream. Using dip nets they make one pass and fill the net to capacity. Emptying the net, they take another swipe filling it yet again. They cannot believe their luck. Looking over their shoulders, they are tempted. They are alone, not another fishermen in sight. Each has their limit of two quarts. Quickly, they return to fishing overcome by greed. The pair is not as secluded as they think. From the tangle of alders emerges a shadowy green figure. A flashlight beam cuts the darkness and a voice shatters the quiet lapping of the brook, “Game Warden, hold it right there . . .” The dipping of smelts in the springtime is a popular pastime among many of Maine’s sportsmen. The small baitfish start returning to tributary streams in early spring to spawn based on combination of several factors. Photoperiod, water temperature, and flow rate all signal the silvery forage fish to depart from their usual lake or pond habitat to their spawning areas in mass. The sport of smelt fishing is heavily regulated because of the important role the forage fish plays in the 20 Smelt Enforcement SPRING 2011 success of Maine’s coldwater game fish. Several tributaries across the state are closed to the taking of smelts. The net used to dip smelt must contain a rigid circular frame that is not more than 24 inches in diameter measured from any point on the hoop and must be manually operated by one person holding a valid Maine fishing license. A person may take two quarts of smelts as part of their daily bag limit. Smelts may also be kept alive to be used as bait. Maine state law clearly states: “A person may not keep more than five dozen smelts alive as part of that person’s daily bag limit [2 quarts].” Smelts are the primary forage of one of Maine’s signature game fish, landlocked salmon. They are also on the menu for several other game fish. Because smelts are so concentrated in small pockets in the early spring, they are very susceptible to both legal and illegal fishing pressure. A single fisherman, in one night, could decimate a population of smelts in a tributary by taking over the limit. On a good night, quarts can quickly become gallons as temptation strikes. People taking over the limit are not the only sportsmen that can have an effect on smelt populations. Even the most law-abiding sportsmen could be affecting smelts without even thinking. As smelts swim into tributary streams the females run first, depositing their eggs on the stream bottom to be fertilized. In some brooks, this coating of eggs can be very thick. Fishermen wading into the stream to legally dip smelts