Mississippi River Fisheries

Sites of Special Interest
WI DNR & Wisconsin Aquatic Gap Mapping Application
UW Center for Limnology, WDNR, and UW Sea Grant's Fish Identification Site
Toxic Substance Monitoring: Fish Tissue Monitoring Program
Wisconsin Fishing Regulations
Tournament Permits
Fish Consumption Advisories

Chippewa River Sturgeon Waters Thumbnail

Common name: Shovelnose Sturgeon (Sand Sturgeon)

Life Cycle Information

Scientific name: Scaphyirhynchus platorynchus (Scaphyirhynchus means spade snout and platorynchus means broad snout.

Identification: Body much elongated; torpedo-shaped. Snout long, spade-shapedl. Spiracle absent. Caudal peduncle (in front of tail) slender and completely encased in bony plates. Lower lip with four lobes. Barbels on lower snout, strongly fringed, 4. Upper lobe of tail elongated into a threadlike (filamentous) extension (often broken off). Adults tawny to gray or olivaceous dorsally, lighter ventrally.

Black River Sturgeon ThumbnailDistribution: The shovelnose sturgeon occurs only in the Mississippi drainage basin, appearing in the Mississippi River, the Wisconsin River upstream to the Prairie du Sac Dam, the St. Croix River upstream to St. Croix Falls Dam, the Chippewa River up to the Eau Claire Dam, and the Red Cedar River upstream to the Menomonie Dam.

Spawning: Spawning takes place during May and June. In the Red Cedar-Chippewa rivers, shovelnose sturgeon spawned the last week in May through the first week in June at water temperatures of 67-70° F. It is generally accepted that shovelnose sturgeon migrate upstream for spawning.

Harvesting shovelnose sturgeon: There is a year-round hook and line season on shovelnose sturgeon in the lower Wisconsin River (below the Prairie du Sac Dam).

For more information, please contact Karl Scheidegger, 608.267.9426.

Trout Waters in the Misssippi River Basin

See the DNR Managed Lands Site to find easements and wildlife areas for fishing and other recreational opportunities.

Last Revised: July 21, 2007