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After years of dedicated efforts, the Arctic grayling is making a comeback in northern Michigan. The reintroduction process began Monday with a ceremony at the Oden Fish Hatchery. The Michigan ...
Arctic grayling are a freshwater fish in the salmonidae family, the DNR said. They have a prominent, sail-like dorsal fin and often iridescent markings. The largest of the streamlined cold-water ...
Arctic grayling live in many northern waterways, but they disappeared from Michigan in 1936. Michigan Department of Natural Resources Arctic grayling were once so abundant in Michigan’s rivers ...
Native American tribes across the region are working to restore the Arctic grayling, a fish that has disappeared from ...
A species of fish with a tall, iridescent top fin once swam in the Muskegon River and in other cool waterways in Michigan. Nearly a century after its disappearance, the Arctic grayling will return ...
Native American tribes across the region are working to restore the Arctic grayling, a fish that has disappeared from ...
The Michigan Arctic Grayling Initiative is a partnership that started in 2016 between the Little River Band of Ottawa Indians ...
As the weather turns colder, many anglers hang up their rods until spring, assuming the drop in temperatures makes fishing pointless. Fear not, though—grayling will feed even in the harshest ...
Often referred to just as "grayling," Arctic grayling are a freshwater fish in the salmon family. Arctic grayling have a sail-like dorsal fin and often have iridescent markings, according to the DNR.
Since 1991, environmental groups and individuals have periodically pushed the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to add the fluvial (river dwelling) population of Arctic grayling — the last in the ...
The agency’s loss could also mean the Fish and Wildlife Service will need to pay up attorneys’ fees in the court battle over the Arctic grayling. A Montana-based federal judge has ordered the ...