Salmon and steelhead are valuable resources to Idaho that already face many challenges, and they don’t need more, particularly from illegally introduced walleye that have been creeping up the Snake River. Walleye are voracious, predatory fish that can consume young salmon and steelhead that are rearing, or migrating, in Idaho rivers. Knowing how many walleye are out there is challenging without anglers reporting any walleye they catch (and keep).
Anyone who catches a walleye in an Idaho river is asked to kill it, take a photo and contact Idaho Fish and Game Biologist Marika Dobos at the Lewiston Regional Office by email at marika.dobos@idfg.idaho.gov, or by calling (208) 750-4228.
Information provided by anglers – along with a fish trap at Lower Granite Dam – indicate that walleye are moving upstream of Lower Granite in increasing numbers. The Snake River is immense, and long sections of it are difficult to access and monitor fish populations, so trying to understand what is going on with walleye is challenging. Anglers have been key to helping biologists understand walleye distribution in these areas.
“Anglers have been great about keeping us informed about walleye they’re encountering, and we greatly appreciate that,” Dobos said. “We know it can be an inconvenience to their fishing trips, but catching, keeping and reporting walleye is the best tool biologists have to monitor where these fish are migrating, estimating how many might be out there, and also removing some of them.”
Up until recently, Fish and Game have had only a handful of reported walleye caught in Idaho’s salmon and steelhead rivers, and only four were confirmed with pictures (one in 2020, one in 2019, and three in 2022). Northern pikeminnow can be misidentified as walleye, so Fish and Game asks anglers to provide pictures to confirm the species (Walleye identification tips).