Here is a small write up by Alecya Gallaway giving a quick time line of Clear Lake and its fish:
Fishing
Early fishing reports from the 1920s and early 1930s indicate Clear Lake as an almost fresh water habitat some of the time, and fish caught there were mostly fresh water catfish, bass, perch, bream, and alligator gar. Blue crabs and bait shrimp were caught in the marshes just inside the channel to Taylor Lake. The only oyster reef was located just inside the lake where the Clear Creek Channel made its snake-like route to Galveston Bay. According to Tony Muecke, in the 1939 Gar Rodeo held by Muecke’s bait camp an alligator gar was caught in Clear Lake that “was as big around as a nail keg and over 8-feet long”. It took a boat davit to lift it out of the water. Men who regularly fished the area thought the salinity in the lake increased during the late 1940s after the straight channel was cut to the bay.
Before the 1940s, the small shrimp in Clear Lake were only used as bait and were caught with seines and cast nets. By the 1950s, markets had opened up for small shrimp and Clear Lake was considered a major shrimp nursery grounds. The fish listed by the National Marine Fishery Service at the Houston, Lighting and Power Company generating plant on Clear Creek at Webster were brackish and saltwater species. During the 1950s Tarpon were caught in Clear Lake all the way to Clear Creek at Webster.
Fishing
Early fishing reports from the 1920s and early 1930s indicate Clear Lake as an almost fresh water habitat some of the time, and fish caught there were mostly fresh water catfish, bass, perch, bream, and alligator gar. Blue crabs and bait shrimp were caught in the marshes just inside the channel to Taylor Lake. The only oyster reef was located just inside the lake where the Clear Creek Channel made its snake-like route to Galveston Bay. According to Tony Muecke, in the 1939 Gar Rodeo held by Muecke’s bait camp an alligator gar was caught in Clear Lake that “was as big around as a nail keg and over 8-feet long”. It took a boat davit to lift it out of the water. Men who regularly fished the area thought the salinity in the lake increased during the late 1940s after the straight channel was cut to the bay.
Before the 1940s, the small shrimp in Clear Lake were only used as bait and were caught with seines and cast nets. By the 1950s, markets had opened up for small shrimp and Clear Lake was considered a major shrimp nursery grounds. The fish listed by the National Marine Fishery Service at the Houston, Lighting and Power Company generating plant on Clear Creek at Webster were brackish and saltwater species. During the 1950s Tarpon were caught in Clear Lake all the way to Clear Creek at Webster.
COMMUNITY WITH A LARGE
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