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      High water temperatures result
      in continued delays for Lower Illinois trout stockings. 
       
      October 22, 2008 - Warm weather conditions
      have prompted the Oklahoma Department of Wildlife Conservation
      to postpone regular trout stockings at the Lower Illinois River
      below Tenkiller, but biologists say water temperatures are slowly
      decreasing. 
      Wildlife Department officials had hoped to resume
      stockings by the end of October, but water temperatures have
      remained too warm for trout, temporarily preventing further stocking. 
      According to Jim Burroughs, east central region
      fisheries supervisor for the Wildlife Department, it was heavy
      spring rains and a period of extreme heating that combined to
      create the unusually warm water in Tenkiller Reservoir. 
      These waters are released through turbines used
      for hydropower generation and flow directly into the Lower Illinois
      River trout stream. 
      "This has been a very unusual year,"
      says Gary Peterson, east central region fisheries biologist for
      the Department. "Temperatures need to be 65 degrees or lower
      in the tailrace during power generation before regular stockings
      can begin again." 
      Officials are routinely monitoring water temperatures,
      and although they are beginning to decrease, it is at a very
      slow rate. Stockings have been discontinued since August 12 and
      will resume as soon as temperatures reach optimum levels. 
      According to biologists with the Wildlife Department,
      trout that were in the water before temperatures warmed to near
      lethal limits have a better chance of adapting to the temperatures
      and may find springs and other refuges where colder temperatures
      may exist. 
      The Lower Illinois River is one of only two year-round
      trout fisheries in the state and is managed by the Wildlife Department. 
      Anglers are still having success at the Lower Illinois
      River catching largemouth bass on topwater lures in the backwaters
      and weed beds. 
      Additionally, striped bass fishing is good on cut
      bait, and catfish angling is fair on cut bait along the bottom
      of the river. 
      For more information about trout fishing in Oklahoma,
      log on to wildlifedepartment.com. 
       
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