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The Arctic grayling is economically important; it is a "key subsistence species" [14]: 43 for the Iñupiat people of the Alaska North Slope, it is raised commercially for food and it is one of the most important species for Sport fishing in Alaska.
The Arctic Grayling (Thymallus arcticus montanus) was originally distributed throughout the Madison River drainage below Firehole Falls and Gibbon Falls and the Gallatin River drainage. Introductions of brown and rainbow trout into the Madison River drainage caused the extirpation of the grayling from these rivers.
The Montana Arctic grayling (Thymallus arcticus montanus) is a North American freshwater fish in the salmon family Salmonidae.The Montana Arctic grayling, native to the upper Missouri River basin in Montana and Wyoming, is a disjunct population or subspecies of the more widespread Arctic grayling (Thymallus arcticus). [5]
Anglers visiting the park to fish will encounter westslope cutthroat, Yellowstone cutthroat, rainbow, brown, brook and lake trout, mountain whitefish and Arctic grayling. The park's fishing season runs from the Saturday in May associated with Memorial Day to October 31st each year.
Grebe Lake used to hold both lacustrine arctic grayling and rainbow trout. In 2017, the NPS embarked on a three-year fish restoration project in the upper Gibbon river watershed to remove all non-native trout and grayling. Grebe lake and its tributaries were poisoned with rotenone in the summer of 2017 to remove the grayling and rainbow trout.
The two populations are commonly called Montana Arctic grayling. [4] The Big Hole River Watershed Committee (BHWC) was formed in 1995 by several Big Hole ranchers and some factions of the conservation community who opposed an ESA listing for fluvial Arctic grayling.
The lakes are world-renowned for trophy Arctic grayling fishing. [1] The lakes also support large concentrations of lake trout, provide key feeding habitat for large numbers of sockeye and coho salmon.
Ruby River - rainbow and brown trout in lower reaches, cutbow and Arctic grayling in headwaters; Yellowstone River - A Blue Ribbon trout stream. [8] Headwaters in Wyoming and Yellowstone National Park [18] [21] [22] [23] Nevada. Truckee River; New Hampshire. Androscoggin River; Connecticut River - Fly fishing only above Lake Francis [24] New Jersey