March 2013

Did you know that the Great Lakes are the biggest freshwater source in the world? Lake Erie is the most productive for fishing of all the Great Lakes. Your support helps make our streams clean, clear and healthy so they can support this complex ecosystem. By donating to PCS, you help us reach our goals of restoring rivers that lead to Lake Erie beaches that promote fishable and swimmable conditions for generations.

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February

croppedprestenclingalisonrodgerssmallIt is time to start thinking spring! And that means Storm Drain Marking is around the corner! This year, on April 27th, we are teaming up with Global Youth Service Day to do Storm Drain Marking in multiple jurisdictions around Toledo. We are looking for energetic volunteers ages 10 and up who want to educate the public and conserve waterways. Storm Drain Marking is an easy project that educates citizens about the dangers of dumping harmful materials into storm drains that lead directly to our local waterways. Volunteers use stencils and spray paint to write “Drains are for Rain, Flows to Waterway” by storm drains in local neighborhoods. After a morning of marking, an Appreciation Picnic will be held to celebrate our achievements. Marking will be 8:30am-12:00pm and the picnic will be held at 12:30 at the Toledo Zoo. If your organization would like to be part of this important community service and education project, please contact Partners for Clean Streams at 419-874-0727 or This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. Please check out the informational poster  for more information and save the date for April 27th!

damage at kitty toddThe Maumee Corps project is officially underway and on-the-ground! This grant funded project is meant to improve habitats around the Maumee Area of Concern while putting otherwise unemployed workers back to work.  Over 1,360 acres of land and approximately 4,000 linear feet of stream bank will be improved. Native plants will be harvested and re-planted, invasive species will be treated and removed, and over 20 seasonal and part-time jobs will be created because of this grant from NOAA.


In order to better manage the project as a whole, Partners for Clean Streams (PCS) has decided to sub-award to The Metroparks of the Toledo Area and The Nature Conservancy (TNC). Both of these agencies will manage workers hired through this grant while PCS still maintains a small group to work at the University of Toledo, Olander Park System, and the Boy Scout’s Camp Miakonda. The Metroparks’ employees have been actively working since December of last year, while TNC and PCS will be getting workers started in April. In fact, a recent article in the Toledo Blade highlights the work now underway at the Metroparks’ through this PCS program.  


This new program hasn’t been without its challenges though. Given the large scope of the project and complex permitting and planning needed, PCS has faced multiple delays in developing and implementing the project in the way we had originally intended. Unfortunately because of the delays, the project partners have changed but the workers hired and the measurable improvements made on-the-ground through this grant will eventually exceed the grant expectations. In fact, The Olander Park System has recently stepped in to add hundreds of acres of invasive species treatment, including oak savanna and wet prairie habitat, to further expand the regional, coordinated habitat restoration that will be achieved through this innovative program. Partners for Clean Streams is looking forward to the coming Spring and getting more workers on the ground and active in the Maumee AOC!

fisherman walleye run metroparks smallEvery year, thousands of fishermen from all over the country swamp the Maumee River in search of the perfect walleye. About mid-March, fisherman can be seen standing shoulder to shoulder casting lines in the Maumee River near Perrysburg and Maumee. One estimate was that 100,000 fishermen take part in this annual ritual. The flood of fishermen is due to the spawning habits of the walleye. Walleye spawn in response to multiple environmental cues, according to Ohio Department of Natural Resources. The highly prized game fish come into the river when the water is about 42-52 degrees but the fish are cued also by amounts of daylight and river currents. The Maumee River’s bottom of large and small rocks and gravel make ideal breeding grounds for the walleye. Walleye also breed in rivers in the eastern and central Lake Erie near Cleveland and around the Great Lakes but the Maumee River has the highest abundance of the fish.  About 3 million walleye are harvested from Western and Central Lake Erie every year, according to the EPA.

What is so great about the famous walleye? Walleyes are one of the most commonly eaten fresh water fish in the Midwest. They are olive and gold colored and can grow to be 30 inches long, weighing about 15 pounds on average.  They can live to be 20 years old and can swim 50 miles in one night.  In the late ‘80s and early ‘90s there was a population decline in Lake Erie. In an attempt to control the decline, a Coordinated Period Management Strategy was developed in early 2000s to set the year’s “Total Allowable Catch” to be 3.4 million fish. Since then, that number has decreased. Each fisherman is allowed to catch a certain number of fish based on the “Total Allowable Catch,” which changes based on the population of fish in the Lake.  Last year, there was a daily limit of 4 walleye from March 1st until April 30th for each fisherman. 

While fishing is a defining part of our culture in the greater Toledo area, we must understand how fishing affects our waterways. Many fishermen, unintentionally, often leave trash and unusable fishing gear in and around the river. This pollution can harm wildlife including birds, snakes, fish and humans that share the river.  It’s an eye-sore and another concern for other recreational river users, like kayakers and people (and their dogs) just enjoying the shallow wading areas of the river. Our Get the Lead Out program aims to clean up this left over debris. While you are catching your limit for the day and snagging your next meal or just enjoying the river as part of the famous Walleye Run, please remember to appreciate and protect the amazing fish and their habitat. Look for non-lead lures and jigs, and remove what tangled or cut line that you can. Deposit trash in the proper receptacles. In addition, look for the monofilament line recycling stations along the river in Sidecut Metropark or at Orleans Park. PCS is working to gear up a program to install more of these along the popular fishing areas over the next few years. And don’t forget, as a local fisherman (or women) you and your family and friends can return to the river with us in the summer to remove the fishing debris as part of our Get the Lead Out program. Just contact our office.

 

Partners for Clean Streams Inc. is striving for abundant open space and a high quality natural environment; adequate floodwater storage capacities and flourishing wildlife; stakeholders who take local ownership in their resources; and rivers, streams and lakes that are clean, clear and safe