Arrow-right Camera
The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Outdoors blog

New rules adopted to protect Roosevelt reband trout

Researchers use an instrument to check a Lake Roosevelt wild redband trout for an implanted transmitter. (COURTESY OF COLVILLE TRIBES / Courtesy of Colville Tribes)
Researchers use an instrument to check a Lake Roosevelt wild redband trout for an implanted transmitter. (COURTESY OF COLVILLE TRIBES / Courtesy of Colville Tribes)

FISHING -- New rules to protect wild redband trout in Lake Roosevelt were adopted in a conference call today by the Washington Fish and Wildlife Commission. 

The commission voted to change the daily catch limit on trout in the Columbia River reservoir upstream from Grand Coulee Dam and extend a closure in a section of the Sanpoil River during a trout spawning period.

Redband trout are a subspecies of rainbow trout found in the Columbia River and its tributaries.

The changes do not take effect until later this year. Details will be posted on the Washington Fish and Wildlife Department’s website in December.

Anglers fishing Lake Roosevelt currently can keep five trout (hatchery or wild) per day, including two fish 20 inches or larger in size.

The commission voted to keep the five-trout daily limit at Lake Roosevelt in the area from Grand Coulee Dam to the Little Dalles power line crossing, but anglers fishing there will be allowed to retain only hatchery trout (adipose-fin-clipped trout). Anglers fishing that area will be required to release all wild trout.

In addition, anglers fishing from the Little Dalles power line crossing to the U.S. - Canada border will have a daily limit of two trout (hatchery or wild fish) that are 18 inches or larger.

Commissioners also voted to extend the closure of the Sanpoil River arm of the reservoir, where redband rainbow trout stage to make their upriver spawning run. The arm will open to fishing June 1, two months later than the area has typically opened.

The commission voted to re-open fishing in tributaries in upper Lake Roosevelt, including Big Sheep and Deep creeks. Beginning next year, those streams will be open the Saturday before Memorial Day through Oct. 31. They were unintentionally closed, as printed in the current regulations, during the Columbia Basin stream strategy rule making process in 2014.



Rich Landers
Rich Landers joined The Spokesman-Review in 1977. He is the Outdoors editor for the Sports Department writing and photographing stories about hiking, hunting, fishing, boating, conservation, nature and wildlife and related topics.

Follow Rich online:




Go to the full Outdoors page