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Glacier Park seeking comment on lake trout plan

by Hungry Horse News
| December 20, 2013 4:03 PM

Glacier National Park is proposing to continue lake trout suppression on Quartz Lake and begin lake trout removal and bull trout conservation on Logging Lake to protect bull trout and other native fish. Both lakes are in the North Fork.

The Park’s bull trout populations are increasingly at risk from invasive non-native lake trout. On the west side of the park, lake trout have invaded nine of 12 lakes to which they have access and are known to have negatively impacted the survival of native fish populations.

Two of the park’s premier bull trout supporting lakes, Quartz Lake and Logging Lake, are at risk of losing their historically robust bull trout populations to non-native invasive lake trout.

Approximately one-third of the United State’s bull trout populations inhabiting natural, undammed lake systems are found in Glacier Park. The Park has a critical role in regional bull trout recovery and long-term conservation, according to Park officials.

Climate change could compound these challenges, Park officials say, as changes in stream flow combined with warmer water temperatures will likely stress bull trout and other native fish and favor invasive non-native species.

In 2009, Glacier Park and the U.S. Geological Survey staff began an experimental project on Quartz Lake to reduce or eliminate lake trout. Results from the project have been promising.

Because of its once vigorous bull trout population, Logging Lake is also a high priority for bull trout conservation. Experimental lake trout suppression at both lakes could do much to protect the Park’s bull trout populations for the long term, as well as contribute to the species’ regional recovery.

An environmental assessment describing the Park’s proposed plan, “The continued lake trout suppression on Quartz Lake, and lake trout removal and bull trout conservation in the Logging Lake drainage,” is available for public review and comment.

Four alternatives are analyzed in the EA —no action, continue lake trout suppression at Quartz Lake, remove lake trout and conserve bull trout in the Logging Lake drainage, or combine alternatives B and C.

The Park has identified Alternative D as the preferred alternative in the EA. The preferred alternative would include continued lake trout suppression at Quartz Lake, and initiation of lake trout removal at Logging Lake along with experimental bull trout conservation efforts.

The EA is available online at http://parkplanning.nps.gov/LoggingQuartz. Comments can be made directly through the Web site or by writing to Superintendent, Glacier National Park, Attn: Logging/Quartz EA, P.O. Box 128 West Glacier MT 59936.  Comments are due by January 22. For more information contact the park at 406-888-7800.