Fish Of The U.P. > Atlantic Salmon :
The Atlantic salmon has been honored throughout history. The Gauls and Romans prized its many qualities, and Britain's Magna Carta even granted it rights of protection.
In recent years, Michigan has planted a new freshwater strain of Atlantic salmon in Lakes Michigan and Huron. These "Gullspang" Atlantic salmon come from the freshwater lakes of Sweden, where they have been landlocked since the Ice Ages. Michigan and Wisconsin have at times experimented with a strain of Atlantic salmon that spawns in the rivers of Quebec province, and Minnesota continues to stock this species.
From these stocking programs, Lake Superior and the other Great Lakes now have small populations of Atlantic salmon. However, the success in reintroducing the fish has not been noteworthy, and Michigan is the only state that continues to stock it.
Though most Atlantic salmon spawn in fresh water and then spend most of
their life in the ocean, some also lived their entire lives in Lake Ontario
up until the 1900s. For over 100 years, Canada and the United States tried
to establish self-sustaining populations of Atlantic salmon in the upper
Great Lakes, but with only minimal success.
After the parasitic sea lamprey was brought under control, Michigan planted
a new freshwater strain of Atlantic salmon in Lakes Michigan and Superior.
These "Gullspang" Atlantic salmon came from Sweden, where they
have been landlocked since the Ice Ages. For a few years in the 1970s, Michigan
and Wisconsin also planted a strain of oceangoing Atlantic salmon in Lake
Superior from stocks that spawned in the rivers of the province of Quebec.
In the 1980s, Minnesota alone continued to plant Atlantic salmon in the
headwater Great Lake, while Michigan today plants these fish only in Lake
Michigan.
Though Atlantic salmon may spawn two or three times during their lives,
self-propagating stocks have not yet developed. But fisheries scientists
still hope that some experimental strain of Atlantic salmon will be found
that has the genetic makeup to survive and reproduce in the Great Lakes.