Table 4. --Catches of sea lampreys and fish at 7 control devices on streams 



of Lake Michigan, 1954 

 (Streams can be located in fig. 1 by the numbers in parentheses) 



Fish 



-3 



XI 



bC.2 



3 &. 





O £ 





to U 



00 



> 





•o H 



o 



s 1 > 



q 2 



Sea lamprey: 



From traps. . 

 Dead in field. 



Native lamprey: 

 From traps . . 

 Dead in field. 



377 

 315 



59 

 151 



Rainbow trout (large) 



From traps 



Dead in field. . . . 



1/ 



Rainbow trout (small) 



From traps 



Dead in field 



Brook trout: 



From traps . . 

 Dead in field. 



















Smelt: 



From traps . . 

 Dead in field. 



White sucker: 



From traps . . 

 Dead in field. 



Longnose sucker: 

 From traps. . 

 Dead in field. 



Miscellaneous—': 

 From traps. . 

 Dead in field. 



4,037 

 907 



204 



237 



157 

 91 



2,192 

 39,249 



3,949 

 164 



215 

 99 





 



3 









 1 



674 

 119 



61 

 



888 

 41 



280 

 3 



3,963 

 100 



13 

 6 



1,260 

 3,018 



1,312 



177 



213 

 54 



14 

 2 





 2,339 



68 

 53 





 



632 

 2,652 



552 

 22 



24 

 2 



3 



4 



37 



5 



1 







333 

 69 



29 

 



1,113 

 744 



2 

 7 





 



25 

 40 



321 

 36 



71 

 368 



112 

 779 



92 

 113 



13 

 56 



1 

 7 



17 



3 



1,700 

 1,021 



177 

 96 



12 

 



11,454 

 2,988 



1/ Over 12 inches, total length 



2/ Miscellaneous includes brown trout, yellow perch, walleye, longnose dace, 

 trout -perch, sculpin, spottail shiner, common shiner, logperch, brown 

 bullhead, black bullhead, smallmouth bass, pumpkinseed, rock bass, burbot, 

 white bass, creek chub, stickleback, mudminnow, silver redhorse, lake chub, 

 johnny darters, bowfin, hog sucker, and carp. The largest number of any 

 species was 47,536 logperch 



16 



