| Official Oct.
2, 2003 Press Release
DIAMOND VALLEY LAKE HAS ALL THE MAKINGS
OF A FISHERY PARADISE
Lake’s fishery capitalizes on partnership between
Metropolitan, California Department of Fish and Game
LOS ANGELES---Anglers throughout the West are priming
for one of the most anticipated fishing events in California’s
history Friday (Oct. 3).
Early Friday morning, the Metropolitan Water District
of Southern California, in partnership with the California
Department of Fish and Game, opens one of the best and
most diverse fisheries at Diamond Valley Lake near Hemet
in southwest Riverside County.
Measuring 4½ miles long and two miles wide, the
lake promises to be an angler’s paradise, state
fishery experts predict.
"Like many others throughout the region--actually
we've had calls from across the county and from as far
away as Japan--I've really been looking forward to getting
out on the lake and landing some of the big bass that
have been growing for the past five years," said
Jill T. Wicke, Metropolitan’s manager of water system
operations.
“Because this is a drinking water reservoir and
emergency supply for about 18 million people, Metropolitan’s
number one priority is the safety and reliability of the
lake’s water. After those concerns are assured,
you're going to find me and my family out on the lake,”
said Wicke, an avid angler.
Because of the extensive fishery planning involved at
Diamond Valley, Mike Giusti, the lead DFG biologist at
the lake, calls the outcome a true department success
story. In collaboration with Metropolitan since 1997,
DFG managed the lake’s fishery since 1999.
“Keep in mind, this lake is just three years old,”
Giusti said. “For its age, it’s the best fishery
in Southern California. And, if the growth rates continue,
in five years there won’t be another lake that can
touch it.”
Before the water district began filling the 260-billion-gallon
reservoir in early 2000, DFG biologists invited anglers
from across the state to provide input on how they would
like the fishery to be managed.
“The fishery was developed with a lot of help from
the public. It wasn’t just any one person’s
plan, or strictly a Fish and Game plan,” said Giusti,
“We had people who asked us about bringing in several
different types of fish, and building underwater reefs.”
The department responded by establishing nearly a dozen
different fisheries and constructing a series of pipe
caves and brush structures, as well as hundreds of rock
reefs that form underwater havens for the fish.
Even before the lake’s opening day, DFG officials
sense Diamond Valley’s potential for becoming one
of the department’s premier successes, as one of
the most respectable fisheries in the West.
“We have the potential for a 20-pound-plus bass
to be caught here, but I think that is still five to 10
years away,” Giusti said. “I think the genetics
are in our favor, as well as the growth rates we are seeing,
and there’s a ton of food in there.”
Diamond Valley’s bass fishery planning began in
1997 when several lakes were sampled for bass. Those waters
included Upper Otay, Miramar, Castaic, Casitas, Pyramid,
Perris and Lake Hodges. The goal was to retrieve samples
of bass and send them to the University of California
at Davis to determine which were the purest of the bunch.
With about 96 percent pure largemouth bass genes, Lake
Hodges proved to offer the best genetic material. As a
result, in February 1999, DFG relocated 217 Hodges bass
to an 80-acre pond constructed on the floor of Diamond
Valley. The bass averaged 2 to 4 pounds, with a half-dozen
between 5 and 8 pounds, and one more than 8 pounds.
The lake’s structure has proven to be conducive
to a successful, diverse bass fishery. Prior to the filling,
a structure was placed between 35 to 120 feet down when
the lake is at full pool. Lake levels are expected to
fluctuate annually about 35 feet.
Although no largemouth bass have been planted since the
original stocking, preliminary estimates taken in the
spring show there are 35,000 largemouth bass greater than
12 inches in the lake. Of those fish, the average size
is 2 to 4 pounds.
“The reservoir is maintaining amazing growth rates,”
Giusti admitted. “In their first year, bass are
reaching 12 inches and are putting on a pound per year
thereafter.”
Meanwhile, small-mouth bass were taken from Shaver Lake
in central California to help the mountain lake recover
from a stunted bass population. Some 1,700 small-mouth
bass averaging 7 inches were placed into the Diamond Valley
rearing pond. Each year since 2000, DFG has added 500
smallmouth to the lake.
“The vegetation below the lake’s surface helps
promote bass growth,” Giusti said. “When the
lake filled, it flooded the vegetation along the reservoir’s
floor and slopes, making great habitat. That habitat should
last for another five years.”
Most of the fish growth at the lake stems from a well-balanced
food source. DFG introduced two strains of crawdads--both
red swamp and signals--silverside minnows and panfish,
as well as tule perch, carp, shad and freshwater shrimp
that came in with the imported water.
“The silversides are the primary reason the bass
are so big. When I cruised the shoreline when the lake
was lower, it was like a river of fish and all of them
were silversides. They are great bass food,” Giusti
said.
Bass are not the only species on the fishery menu. Channel
and blue catfish also are available, yet may be difficult
to target for many anglers because no night fishing will
be permitted. Some 100 3- to 5-pound channel catfish were
relocated from Metropolitan’s nearby Lake Mathews,
as well as 200 blue catfish from 5 to 25 pounds.
“Diamond Valley is a pretty steep reservoir and
catfish like gently sloping reservoirs, so we’ll
have to see how things go,” Giusti said. “However,
it’s possible that a catfish more than 100 pounds
could be in the lake some day, but that could take 20
years.
“Eventually, I could see a big blue catfish grow
about 5 pounds a year. But right now, I bet the bigger
blues that were put in are about 30 pounds,” he
added.
Bluegill and red ear sunfish also are part of the fishery
mix. In cooperation with the Arizona Game and Fish Department,
DFG transferred 400 red ear from the Colorado River, with
Arizona contributing another 100,000. In addition, 3,000
bluegill were shipped in from Lake Perris and another
20,000 were purchased from private hatcheries in Central
California. “The lake should support a decent panfish
fishery,” Giusti said.
In addition, Diamond Valley offers the most successful
two-tier fishery in the region. The cold-water fishery
may be the most successful put-and-grow fishery in the
state, Giusti claimed, offering several strains of trout
including Hot Creek, Eagle Lake, Coleman and Whitney.
“I think this lake is going to offer a fishery we
haven’t had before in Southern California,”
he said. “There’s no doubt that the quality
of trout is here. In fact, the growth rates exceed what
we could do in a hatchery.
“Since 1999, we’ve stocked more than 200,000
trout. I could easily see 20-pound limits of five fish
when the lake opens. Right now, there isn’t a trout
in the lake under 2 pounds. They should be averaging 2
to 5 pounds. We should see a lot of fish in the 7- to
10-pound range.”
General statewide fishing regulations will govern the
reservoir. Creel limits are as follows: five bass 12 inches
or larger, regardless of species; five trout and only
five in possession; no limit on panfish; and 10 catfish.
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