According to a recent study by the Michigan Department of Natural Resources, smallmouth bass in Lake St. Clair are bigger than they used to be. Because the bass are often released back into the water instead of going home with fishers, they can live longer and grow bigger. Read the full story by Bridge Michigan.
Great Lakes Daily News
Latest Daily News
- Army Corps analysis finds Great Lakes pipeline tunnel would have sweeping environmental impacts
- EDITORIAL: Protect, appreciate, and learn about the Great Lakes
- COMMENTARY: Canada’s air and water at risk as Trump administration guts environmental rules
- Federal funding for Great Lakes program at risk
- Construction begins on Chicago project to send Lake Michigan water to southwest suburbs
- New wetland could show how Michigan can reduce agricultural runoff polluting Lake Erie
- Trump administration budget cuts and policies blamed for lower attendance at Great Lakes conference this week
- ‘The sand had moved on’: Sleeping Bear Dunes platform removed
- 6 safe drinking water projects in mid-Michigan receive congressional push
- Pocket watch from deadly shipwreck returns home 165 years later: ‘Truly a once-in-a-lifetime discovery’
- Great Lakes fish consumption app improves Anishinaabe way of life, study shows
- Illinois wants to protect the Great Lakes from invasive carp, but a toxic mess stands in the way