Black Lake sturgeon season ended after just a few minutes, setting a record for the fast sturgeon season ever.
Lake sturgeon were found in relative abundance in Lake Michigan and nearshore waters of Milwaukee when European immigrants settled the area. However, the fish were extirpated over much of their ...
It’s been a decade since my first lake sturgeon trip to the Rainy River. My first fish battled me on a doubled over heavy action rod for over 20 minutes in what felt like a quantum leap ...
Lake sturgeon were found in relative abundance in Lake Michigan and nearshore waters of Milwaukee when European immigrants settled the area. However, the fish were extirpated over much of their ...
Read Next: A Lake Sturgeon Swam 651 Miles from Wisconsin to Illinois in ‘Longest-Known’ Migration Down Mississippi River Woiderski adds that although Mullet and Burt are known for bigger sturgeon than ...
(WXYZ) — The Michigan Department of Natural Resources announced the results of a 17-minute Black Lake sturgeon season on Tuesday, days after the annual event ended ...
Michigan's shortest fishing season was back in 2025, but only for 17 minutes. The 2025 lake sturgeon fishing season on Black Lake in Cheboygan and Presque Isle counties began at 8 a.m. Saturday ...
WAYLAND, Mich — The Lake Sturgeon can grow to be over ... and US Fish and Wildlife Service to collect fertilized sturgeon eggs in the Kalamazoo River – and bring them to a streamside rearing ...
The 78-pound sturgeon that Austin Dreifuerst caught during the 2025 sturgeon season on Black Lake.Credit... Supported by By Ken Belson Photographs by Brian Kaiser Brian Kaiser traveled to ...
Michigan's sturgeon fishing season on Black Lake set a record Saturday as the fastest ever. The season, which lasted 17 minutes before the harvest limit was reached, beat the previous record of 35 ...
The goal is to restore a wild, self-sustaining lake sturgeon population in the urban river that runs up the northeast side of ...
A good case could be made for the lake sturgeon. Donnie Herman of the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources wrangles a sturgeon into a net on the Wolf River beneath the dam in Shawano in 2019.