Didn’t want to highjack another post (Just What is Fly fishing?)
On the aforementioned thread there is a picture of a NICE trout taken byCO Flyfisher from the Niagara River. It got me to wondering:
What makes a steelhead a steelhead, instead of a lake rainbow running upstream? Here in CA, I grew up believing that a Steelie was a fish which went to sea, through the surf, therefore gaining a “head of steel” to get there and back. Any other rainbow was a rainbow.
Do the Great Lakes rainbows go up the St. Lawrence (or other) streams to the sea? If not, what makes a Steelhead?
Is there a minimum size to the lake? If you catch the fish in said lake, is it considered a steelhead? If I catch a 'bow in Lake Tahoe, Lake Superior, or Lake ________ is it considered a steelhead?
A minimum size to the fish? In California, a rainbow of 16" or greater, in a stream which is open to sea access (anadromous stream) no matter how far (or how many joinings with other waters) from the ocean, is considered a Steelhead. Silly, I know, but there it is.
I saw that the other thread about what is FFing stayed civil, and have seen other discussions of the same topic devolve into angst. I am hoping for the same, because I want to know what other people think.
Having grown up in a Great Lakes state I like to tell people that have never been to see one of them to go there, stand in the surf on the shore of one and tell me why these are called lakes. I believe were it not for the fact that these are immense bodies of fresh water they would indeed be called seas as they almost incomprehensible in size and scope as well as being fed by streams and rivers just like the world’s seas. Steelies in the lakes run from the Great Lake body, up the tributaries and back every year to spawn. Correct me if I am wrong someone but I also believe that Steel Head are a non native species transplanted by man. I don’t know if the Steelies run the Saint Lawrence Seaway but I believe that at one time Atlantic Salmon did run up to Lake Ontario and Niagara Falls. Could be wrong about that too.
Lake Tahoe is a large, beautiful lake but it is a drop in the bucket when compared to even the smallest Great Lake.
having grown up in North Idaho and fished there for steelhead that made the journey from those upper tributaries out to sea and back and now being in the north country of New York and fishing for the rainbows and “steelhead” here I also found the name thing odd. But I will say that the rainbows (steelhead) that come out of Lake Ontario have a different disposition and fight different than large rainbows elsewhere in the area that do not have access to the lake. also I don’t think that any where in upstate New York you can find any rainbow that will match sizes with the fish coming out of the lakes. so I believe that an argument could be made that those lake run rainbows be called steelhead. I will admit I still struggle with them being called steelhead because they do not actually go to the ocean but after fishing for trout here I will honestly say they do deserve a distinction from there siblings that do not reside in the lakes. I don’t know which way to go!
In the late 1800s steelhead from the McCloud River were stocked in the great lakes. There have been several introductions since with steelhead from other west coast rivers. The strain of steelhead we now have in the great lakes are a mix of all of these early west coast steelhead. Just because you take the fish away from salt water does not mean the fish has genetically changed. You can trace the DNA of our fish directly to the steelhead in the Pacific Ocean. The same goes for the king salmon and the pink salmon that are in the great lakes. We also have Atlantic salmon that can be traced to strains in the Atlantic Ocean.
Come to the great lakes and catch one of our steelhead and then tell me they are not steelhead.
I thought the difference is that lake run rainbows, in general, return to spawn their very first season in the lake or ocean and that steelhead (again in general) spend at least two seasons in the lake or ocean before returning to spawn.
Do you give a fish a name because of its DNA or because of the way it lives? It’s like the question “what is fly fishing”. You will never get everyone to agree on an answer. Let’s agree to disagree.
To me a Steelhead is a Rainbow that has undergone smoltification (transition to saltwater) and returns to freshwater to spawn. That is not a slight to big lake-run Rainbows. I would love to catch a Great Lakes Steelh… err I mean Rainbow someday.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) is a species of salmonid native to tributaries of the Pacific Ocean in Asia and North America. The steelhead is a sea run rainbow trout (anadromous) usually returning to freshwater to spawn after 2 to 3 years at sea. In other words, rainbow trout and steelhead trout are the same species. The fish is sometimes called a salmon trout.
I think of steelie as something that has run from fresh water to salt and then back again, but that is my definition. As it is not a schientific term it is open to all interpretations so your definition is as good as mine (maybe better).
On the west coast, we have Rainbow trout that live their whole lives in the rivers, no matter how big they get, they are always in the river. Then we have Steelhead trout, yes a form of Rainbow, but they evolved into spawning in the rivers then running for the saltwater where they usually spend most of their lives, year after year returning to spawn then run. There are some Steelhead that will come into the rivers in the fall, winter in the river, then spawn in the spring and zip back out to the saltwater. Genetics and evolution and ice ages made those determinations.
The Steelhead in the Great Lakes are steelies from the west coast and they act just like their brothers and sisters out west. They spend most of their lives in those huge oceans of fresh water, the Great Lakes, and make their runs up stream at ice out to spawn. I have caught far more steelhead that came from Lake Superior than I have ever caught up here in the northwest. And, that was just from one week long trip to Thunder Bay, Ontario.
The steelhead of the Great Lakes do not go to the Atlantic Ocean. There really are no steelhead in the Atlantic (with a possible exception way down in Argentina). But, they are steelhead, not rainbow trout.
The same holds true for the three or so species of salmon that we have sent over from the west coast and planted in the Great Lakes. Just because those salmon don’t hit the saltwater, it does not mean they are not salmon and they make their annual runs in the spring or fall (depending upon the species) just like they do out west.
That is kind of funny in a way. I never hear people say that the Great Lakes salmon are not salmon, but I do hear a lot of steelheaders out west who think that the Great Lakes steelies are not real steelhead. To them I say make a trip to the Great Lakes and catch yourself 10 to 40 steelhead in a day and tell me they are not steelies and that the steelhead fishing isn’t the greatest in the Great Lakes. If I want to catch steelies, that is where I go.
tell you what i have never caught a lake “trout” but i know folks who have along with lake run steelies. i hear that once you catch a laker you will look at steelies like steel head fishers look at other landlocked trout. fun to catch but more fun to catch a laker or so i have been told.
me i just love being out there period and i try not to take debates like this too seriously as they can suck the joy right out of the sport. however there is a lot of good info being shared here and in a civil manner too. i love faol!
I beg to differ sagefisher,there are indeed a few steelhead ascending a select few Gulf of St.Lawrence streams in both NS and PEI that I’m aware of,and would assume also in NB and PQ?Not many mind you…but some nonetheless.Not a big deal nor even very well known…jest sayin’…there are a few.Probably a safe bet that they were Lake Ontario steelhead that managed to find their way down through the locks and into the Gulf?Which brings up another point…Great Lakes steelhead are in fact steelhead.They are west coast transplants that have flourished both through intensive stocking and natural reproduction,just like so many other west coast salmonids that have done well there,chinooks and cohos to name a couple,along with the efforts being made at present to re-introduce Atlantic Salmon to Lake O.They are still every bit steelhead or Atlantics or wutever,only difference being the GLs have become their surrogate oceans.IMHO,an anadromous rainbow,whether it begins it’s spawning run in the Pacific,the GLs,or even the Atlantic coast as is the rare exception to the rule,is indeed a Steelhead.
That’s all fine and dandy Jed,but what Merriam-Webster fails to recognise is that for west coast salmonids transplanted to the Great Lakes,the lakes become their “sea” and they are in fact still anadromous species of fish.
A true steelhead passes through smoltification and migrates to the ocean where it will spend 2 to 4 years. It will then return to its natal river to spawn and start the process over again. If it doesn’t go to the salt it is not a steelhead.
I’ve lived in Michigan my entire life and have fished for steelhead for most of my life here, and the whole argument of “Steelhead” boils down to one simple thing…semantics. That’s all. Yes our Great Lakes steelhead ARE steelhead. As mentioned they are of the Mcloud strain of steelhead that were brought here from the west coast, they are born in the river and then migrate to the Great Lakes to live for 2+ yrs and then return to spawn (same as any other steelhead). As someone else mentioned our Great Lakes are not exactly “lakes”. We are talking about lakes that have sunk 720ft long Vessels (Edmund Fitzgerald ring a bell?) and in the fall have had recorded waves of over 30+ft high, so they are simply “lakes” in the fact that they are fresh water, but far from what most people would call a “lake”. But the inclusion of salt has nothing to do with our fish not being or not being steelhead.
I’ve seen the discussion of “are our GL steelhead actually steelhead” before on many sites and most times the people that say they aren’t steelhead are people from the west cost that simply like to think they have the market cornered on steelhead. And that’s fine if that’s how they want to think, but that’s a disservice to our steelhead overall IMO.
Think of it this way. If your family comes from Italy and then you move here to the USA and have kids, are your kids still not Italian??
Or just like someone else mentioned. We have Salmon in the Great Lakes (Chinook, Coho, Pinks) which all came from the west just like Steelhead. So how come people accept that they are still salmon when they are here in fresh water but not steelhead?
Not trying to argue with anyone but just making a few points to think about.
Most biologist I have heard discuss this issue say they are genitically the same species but have different innate habits. If you filled the great lakes up with salt, the fish would still do the same thing. Some are born to wander.
The argument will go on forever and there are many opinions. I like to think of it as I think of the two brittanys I have owned. There are of the same species and even of the same bloodline but one liked to range out and the other stayed in. I trained them both the same but they just had different personalities. But then, fish don’t point birds so maybe I am just all wet.
Are the Great Lakes bodies of salt water??? No salt, no steel IMHO. I like the term Motorheads sounds better. Hard to deny Smoltification when going from freshwater to freshwater. The food source may change but the water doesn’t.