Do we have oxygen levels for the last two years?6
I spent 12 years planting vegetation in the lake. Our goal was to establish a seed bank that would eventually populate the lake. The biggest problem is all the common carp rooting around in any vegetation that gets established. The black crappie are stunted, the whites grow well. I hope we got enough plants in the water to create those seed banks and in the future we'll see more vegetation establishment. The most desired plant in my opinion that we planted is eel grass. This grows fairly deep and isn't very visible except on a depth finder. I have people tell me every year they are pulling it up in different parts of the lake, so hopefully we got enough in there. We are exploring some changes to hopefully thin the black crappie out so they'll grow better. There are actually about 4-5x (used to only be 1%) more legal blacks than in the past which I take as a sign the vegetation is expanding but it's still a small percentage. Black crappie are much more dependent on aquatic insects than white crappie. The shad population is critical to good white crappie growth and it can be highly variable. The water level management plan we have with the Corps is geared to benefit the shad spawn most years, but when the lake gets 4 feet high the Corps must release water when they can to maintain flood protection. The shad population is much better now than it was in the 90's. Blacks prefer clearer water than whites so move up lake if you're only catching small blacks and you should find more white crappie. I no longer manage the lake but the folks in St. Joe are working hard to keep improving the fishery.
Joedog, CrappieFiend816 LIKED above post
Do we have oxygen levels for the last two years?6
The Corps of Engineers does water testing monthly from April through October. They would have temperature and oxygen profiles. Oxygen levels have not been an issue at the lake. The only time I saw dead fish due to low oxygen is on trotlines fished below the thermocline (about 12-14 feet). Fish will venture below the thermocline for a short period of time to feed but if they can't go back above it they will die quickly due to lack of oxygen below the thermocline which is normal. Thermoclines develop in the summer and winter. You should always fish shallower than the thermocline in summer and winter.
I had found the 2014 data but the current may not be published.
http://www.nwk.usace.army.mil/Portal...Q%20poster.pdf
They only measure to 7 meters but it looks like in July the thermocouple was around 4 meters. That seems pretty shallow and contradicts what I read in fishing reports?
catchem32 LIKED above post
Here is the 2016 data
https://www.google.com/url?sa=t&sour...ramHrDpOoBnMIg
I'm actually just getting back into fishing after taking a couple years off due to the bad fishing. Been fishing Smithville my entire life and 2015-2016 was the first year I've ever been skunked. Might be overpopulated or maybe the zebra mussel is really hurting the growth. Might want to throw on a bigger hook if you're jigging.
We got ours out of the gasconade river in Bell Chute. There may be some private sources too. New ponds need to age a little. There's usually not anything but clay soil on the bottom. The pond will need some time for the organic material to build up on the bottom. But eel grass would be my plant of choice in a pond.
wolfhnd thanked you for this post
Thank you Sir! The pond has a couple small areas where the original top soil was not disturbed so perhaps it would do OK there. Might be awhile before I can get the wife on a long excursion the Gasconade with a boat. In the meantime I have some arrowhead, burhead, and spikerush for the banks.