Lake Taneycomo's story began in 1913. With
the construction of Ozark Beach Dam at
Powersite on the White River, Taneycomo
became the first in a chain of four
reservoirs that includes Bull Shoals,
Table Rock and Beaver lakes.
For the first 38 years of Lake Taneycomo's
existence, native sport fish of the White
River basin sustained a popular fishery
that helped create one of Missouri's first
tourist areas on the shores of Rockaway
Beach. A new chapter began in 1958, when
Table Rock Dam was built immediately
upstream.
Until then, Taneycomo was basically just a
wide spot in the slow, meandering White
River. After Table Rock Dam was built,
Lake Taneycomo was fed by water that came
from 160 feet below the surface of Table
Rock Lake. The water was cold year-round
and was unsuitable for most of the White
River's warm-water fish. Their populations
declined, as did the popular fishery they
supported.
A rainbow often follows a storm, offering
hope and promise for the future. In this
case, hope came in the form of rainbow
trout! Native to the streams of the West
Coast, rainbow trout were well suited to
the chilly waters that now filled Lake
Taneycomo.
Shepherd of the Hills Hatchery was
constructed to compensate for the loss of
the native warm-water fishery that had
existed before the dam was built. The
hatchery provided a reliable supply of
trout for stocking. Amphipods (known to
anglers as freshwater shrimp) gathered
from Ozark spring branches and stocked
along with the trout, flourished in the
cold waters. The result was fat,
fast-growing trout to fuel a trophy
rainbow fishery.
In the "glory years," light fishing
pressure allowed many of the stocked trout
to grow large. By 1969, stringers of 3- to
5-pound trout were not unusual. Outdoor
writers called Lake Taneycomo the best
trophy rainbow trout lake in North
America.
As Taneycomo's fame grew, so did the
number of anglers pursuing its big
rainbows. A voluntary length limit
encouraged anglers to limit their harvest
to protect the big fish. It seemed to work
for awhile, but eventually there were just
too many anglers. Fishing pressure
quadrupled from 1970 to 1990, requiring a
steady increase in the number of trout
stocked.
By then, the Branson boom had begun.
Development claimed more and more of the
landscape, and sediment entered the lake
during rainstorms. In addition, white
suckers suddenly became common in the lake
and outnumbered trout in some surveys. In
addition, the cold water from Table Rock
Lake contained low levels of dissolved
oxygen in the fall, stressing both fish
and their food sources. Two things were
certain: the big rainbow trout were gone,
and freshwater shrimp were not as numerous
as before.
By the early 1990s, the once-great
Taneycomo trout fishery had fallen on
relatively hard times. Anglers who wanted
something more than stocker-size rainbow
trout demanded that something be done to
bring back the big rainbows. Their demands
were partially met by a new brown trout
fishery that produced enormous, even
world-record size, brown trout. However,
brown trout are harder to catch, and a few
behemoth browns didn't satisfy anglers who
remembered the glory years when rainbows
were measured in pounds, not inches.
The Missouri Department of Conservation
developed several research studies to
determine what caused the decline of the
big rainbows. Some of the studies
suggested there simply wasn't enough food
in Lake Taneycomo to grow large rainbow
trout. Clearly, the lake's freshwater
shrimp population had declined. Other
studies showed that Taneycomo was still
capable of growing rainbows, but few fish
lived longer than a month before being
caught and removed.
Gradually, a picture emerged of a fishery
that could still produce large fish, but
not without some changes. First, because
there was less trout food, fewer trout
could be stocked. Reduced stocking levels
helped the freshwater shrimp population
recover slightly. Still, rainbow trout
harvest remained high, and while trout now
had more to eat, most were harvested
before they could grow large.
It became obvious that the rainbows needed
protection from immediate harvest. So,
beginning in March 1997, the Conservation
Department established new fishing
regulations in the upper part of the lake.
These regulations were designed to protect
some of the rainbows and allow them to
grow larger. Fishing pressure is heavy in
upper Lake Taneycomo, and the trout there
needed more protection.
Studies show a trout is about five times
more likely to die if caught and released
on natural or prepared baits than one
caught on artificial lures or flies.
Because the new rules require anglers to
release most of the trout they catch, it
was necessary to limit fishing tackle in
the upper lake to artificial lures and
flies only. The new rules protected many
of the rainbows from harvest and minimized
losses of released fish to hooking
mortality.
The new fishing regulations created an
almost immediate improvement in the
fishery. Before the rule change, fewer
than 10 percent of the rainbow trout in
the upper part of the lake exceeded 13
inches. Only five months after the
regulation change, the percentage jumped
to 30 percent.
In a little more than two years, there was
also a ten-fold increase in the number of
rainbows in the upper lake. More than half
were longer than 13 inches, and 10 percent
exceeded 16 inches. Bigger rainbows are
back, and with one- to three-pound fish
being caught daily, anglers are recalling
memories of the glory days
Taneycomo still has some problems. Branson
continues to grow, white suckers are still
abundant, and water from Table Rock Lake
still has low oxygen levels during late
summer and fall. The Conservation
Department is working with other agencies
to protect the lake and its fishing, and
to determine if it's possible to make
changes in the operation of Table Rock Dam
that would help the fishery.
Not everyone who fishes Lake Taneycomo is
interested in catching a trophy. Many
simply want to catch a few trout to eat,
and the Conservation Department has
devoted considerable effort to helping
anglers who choose not to fish in the
special regulations area of the upper
lake.
Below the mouth of Fall Creek, for
example, the Department heavily stocks
rainbow trout. Anglers may keep any trout
they catch up to the daily limit of five,
regardless of size, and they may fish with
any kind of bait, lure or fly. In
addition, the Department has built a new
access facility at Cooper Creek, and
improved the access facilities in Forsyth
and Rockaway Beach. These areas bring the
thrill of fighting a rainbow trout to more
anglers by increasing bank fishing
opportunities, making boat access easier
and easing access for disabled anglers.
The saga of Lake Taneycomo continues,
providing plenty of grist for new stories
of how the fishing in this unusual
cold-water lake promises to get better and
better.
|
ABOVE INFORMATION BY Conservation Commission of
Missouri Copyright ©2008 |