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Hatchery Tour Season is Here!
Midwest Region, June 18, 2005
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As the end of the school season approaches, students are eager to continue learning outside of the classroom. Rising outdoor temperatures and early life stage fish rearing operations attract many tour groups to Genoa National Fish Hatchery. During the month of May, hatchery staff welcomed several groups to Genoa NFH for interactive tours. A total of 90 students and adults from Horicon NWR, Stoddard Middle School, WI, Lincoln School in Madison, WI, and Immanuel Lutheran School in La Crosse, Wis., visited the hatchery. Student's ages ranged from 8-18. Tours began with an introduction to the hatchery's history and information about some of the ongoing restoration programs being conducted. This information is supplemented with hands-on experience throughout the tour. This May, students were able to see yearling (up to 1 ft) and two-year-old (up to 2 ft) lake sturgeon first hand, and assist with feeding and care of lake sturgeon fry and fingerlings. Coldwater culture is always a hit with hatchery tours, especially at feeding time. May tours were introduced to thousands of 2-3 inch rainbow trout fingerlings, and 3 inch coaster brook trout fingerlings that will be used in restoration projects in Lake Superior. During tours students are allowed to inspect hatchery ponds for large and smallmouth bass fry, yellow perch, black crappie, bluegill, and walleye and northern pike fingerlings. Genoa station's freshwater mussel recovery building provides students with a unique opportunity to learn about endangered mussel species, and some techniques biologists use in restoring wild mussel populations to the upper Mississippi River and its tributaries. Tours at the Genoa NFH provide students with real-life experiences in aquaculture, biology, and hatchery operations to help them decide the direction they may take as they continue their education and contemplate future careers.

Contact Info: Midwest Region Public Affairs, 612-713-5313, charles_traxler@fws.gov



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