ShareLunker entries way down this year




The Texas ShareLunker season, which runs from Oct. 1 through April 30 ended with the third lowest season in the catch of 13 plus pound largemouth bass – nine fish. The 2000-01 season holds the distinction of having only five fish donated to the program. In a normal year, 20 or more fish are caught.

The Texas ShareLunker Program, now in its 28th year, asks anglers who catch a 13 pound or bigger largemouth bass to keep the fish alive and lend it to the program. The fish, if it is found to be of the Florida strain, is paired with a male Florida bass and any resulting offspring are stocked into public waters or used in other hatchery research aimed at improving the state’s bass fishery.

So, why the low numbers this year?

Allen Forshage, director of Texas Freshwater Fisheries Center believes that it’s the result of the cold winter and drought conditions over much of Texas.

It’s debatable whether a cold winter affected more the fish or the fishermen. Cold water temperatures extending longer into spring may have delayed the spawning urge of the bass. Colder temperatures may have kept a lot of anglers close to the hearth.

A study of ShareLunker records, finds that March invariably accounts for the largest number of ShareLunker entries, 236 of the 557 entries. This year March produced only two entries. April didn’t produce a single entry.

The drought, now almost a decade long, may have had the biggest impact in the reduction of catches. Reservoirs in the western half of the state continue shriveling. “There are lakes that are so low you can’t launch a boat in them,” says Foshage. “The result is less fishing pressure and deteriorating fishery.”

O.H. Ivie, Alan Henry, Falcon, Possum Kingdom and Choke Canyon in the past years produced dozens of ShareLunkers.

Lake Fork, the state’s perennial trophy bass fishery, and producer of almost half of all ShareLunker entries over the past 28 years came through the most entries this season, three. The biggest bass caught at Fork, and the biggest fish for 2013-14 season, weighed 13.86 pounds. It was caught in January.

While this year’s ShareLunker program didn’t draw many entries, it has resulted in production of tens of thousands of potential trophy largemouth bass. Resulting fingerlings will be stocked in Texas lakes over the coming months.

Photo: Randall Claybourne's 13.86 lb. bass was the largest ShareLunker of the just completed season. The fish was caught from Lake Fork.

Photo courtesy of TPWD.

 




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Lake Fork

Fishing Report from TPWD (May 7)

GOOD. Water Stained; 73 degrees; 0.73 feet below pool. Good early morning bass bite around shad spawn areas and with topwater frogs over grass. Midday to mid afternoon work flukes and yum dingers around grass good1-3 feet. New wave of spawners pulling up this week. Carolina rigs fair in 5-10 feet of water on secondary points. Report by Marc Mitchell, Lake Fork Guide Service. Black bass are post spawn and the top water bite is on! Frog patterns are working in the shallow vegetation. The crappie are moving shallow, small clousers are producing well. Large bream have moved shallow, wooly buggers are producing good fish. Channel catfish are cruising 2-4 feet biting clousers. Report by Guide Alex Guthrie, Fly Fish Fork Guide Service. Crappie fishing is settling into the post spawn and summer patterns we should see for the next few months. We are seeing incredible numbers of small black crappie right now loading up on brush piles, lay downs, bridges and docks. The larger black crappie are a little hard to find but you can find some nice groups of them or pick a few out of the smaller fish. The bigger white crappie are beginning to load on the summer pattern trees. We have a tremendous amount of fry covering up a lot of those trees and making it very hard to see those bigger white crappie on forward facing sonar or for them to see your bait. You can find fish in 10-30 feet of water and some may only be 2 feet under the surface or right on the bottom. Minnows and any colored jigs are both producing extremely well. Report by Jacky Wiggins, Jacky Wiggins Guide Service.

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