NORTHERN INDIANA PUBLIC SERVICE COMPANY IURC Electric Service Tariff Original Volume No

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

NORTHERN INDIANA PUBLIC SERVICE COMPANY IURC Electric Service Tariff Original Volume No NORTHERN INDIANA PUBLIC SERVICE COMPANY IURC Electric Service Tariff Original Volume No. 10 Original Sheet No. 2 INDEX OF CITIES, TOWNS AND UNINCORPORATED COMMUNITIES FURNISHED ELECTRIC SERVICE Adams Lake Deep River Hudson Ade Delong Idaville Ainsworth Demotte Independence Hill Aldine Denham Inwood Ambia Dewart Lake Jimtown Angola Dixon Lake Kentland Ashley Donaldson Kewanna Atwood Door Village Kingsbury Barbee Lakes Dune Acres Knox Bass Lake Duneland Beach Koontz Lake Beaver Dam Lake Dyer Kouts Belshaw Earl Park LaCrosse Benton East Chicago LaGrange Beverly Shores Emmatown Lake Bruce Big Long Lake Enos Lake Dale Carlia Boone Grove Etna Lake Gage Boswell Fish Lake Lake George Bourbon (LaGrange County) Lake James Brighton Fish Lake Lake Maxinkuckee Brimfield (LaPorte County) Lake of Silver Lake Bristol Flint Lake Lake of the Woods Brook Foraker (LaGrange County) Brunswick Foresman Lake of the Woods Buffalo (Newton County) (Marshall County) Burket Fowler Lake Station Burnettsville Francesville Lake Village Burns Harbor Freeman Lake LaPorte Burr Oak Fremont Leesburg Cedar Lake Gary Leiters Ford (LaGrange County) Goodland Leroy Cedar Lake Goshen Lochiel (Lake County) Grass Creek Long Beach Chapman Lake Griffith Long Lake Chase Grovertown (Porter County) Chesterton Hamlet Lowell Claypool Hammond Malden Clear Lake Hanna Medaryville Clunette Hebron Mentone Corunna Helmer Merrillville Cromwell Hibbard Michiana Shores Crooked Lake Highland Michigan City Crown Point Hobart Middlebury Crystal Lake Hoffman Milford Culver Howe Mill Creek Issued Date Issued By Effective Date Edmund A. Schroer Chairman and President July 16, 1987 Hammond, Indiana July 16, 1987 NORTHERN INDIANA PUBLIC SERVICE COMPANY IURC Electric Service Tariff Original Volume No. 10 Original Sheet No. 2A INDEX OF CITIES, TOWNS AND UNINCORPORATED COMMUNITIES FURNISHED ELECTRIC SERVICE Millersburg Remington Twin Lakes Mongo Rexville (LaGrange County) Monon Reynolds Tyner Monterey Riverdale Union Center Monticello Rome City Union Mills Morocco Roselawn Valentine Mount Ayr Ross Valparaiso Munster St. John Wabee Lake Nappanee Salem Center Wadena Nevada Mills Salem Heights Wahob Lake New Chicago San Pierre Wakarusa New Elliott Schererville Wanatah New Paris Schneider Warsaw North Judson Scott Waterford North Liberty Seafield Waterford Mills North Webster Sedley Waterloo Norway Shafer Lake Wawaka Oak Shelby Wawasee Ober Shipshewanna Webster Lake Ogden Dunes Shipshewanna Lake Westboro Oliver Lake Shoe Lake Westville Ontario Silver Lake Wheatfield Ora Smithson Wheeler Orland South Haven Whiting Oswego South Milford Winfield Otis Star City Winona Lake Palestine Stillwell Wolcott Palmer Stone Lake Wolcottville Pierceton Stroh Woodland Pine Village Sumava Woodville Pinhook Swanington Wyatt Pinola Syracuse Yellow Creek Lake Pleasant Lake Talbot Yeoman Plymouth Talma Portage Teegarden Porter Tefft Pottawattamie Park Thayer Pretty Lake The Pines (LaGrange County) Tippecanoe Pretty Lake Tippecanoe Lake (Marshall County) Topeka Pulaski Toto Raub Tracy Ray Trail Creek Also effective in Rural Territory furnished electric service by Company Issued Date Issued By Effective Date Edmund A. Schroer Chairman and President July 16, 1987 Hammond, Indiana July 16, 1987.
Recommended publications
  • Contractor Registration List
    Contractor Registration List Business Name / Applicant & Address Registration TypeAlt ID Phone # Registration # Orig . Date Current Start Date Expiration Date #1 M&J CONSTRUCTION INC 2318 CARDINAL DR *SubContractor (Per Trade) 03061(773)519-3554 2011-CR3110 2/8/112/8/11 12/31/11 NEW LENOX IL 60451 #9 CONSTRUCTION LLC 135 S PALMER DR SUITE 200 *Gen Contractor/Const Mgr 01958(630)279-9990 2009-CR01974 8/21/098/21/09 12/31/09 ELMHURST, IL 60126 1 DESIGN GRP INC P.O. BOX 294 *SubContractor (Per Trade) 04053(214)356-8751 2013-CR4114 7/20/126/12/13 12/31/13 CLARENDON HILLS IL 60514 123 EXTERIORS INC 2777 S FINLEY RD SUITE 16 *Gen Contractor w/Trades 00333(630)517-4771 2014-CR01341 1/21/095/9/14 12/31/14 DOWNERS GROVE IL 60515 2777 S FINLEY RD SUITE 16 *SubContractor (Per Trade) 00333(630)517-4771 2008-CR00333 5/15/085/15/08 12/31/08 DOWNERS GROVE IL 60515 12M PARTNERS INC 21W420 THORNDALE AVE *Gen Contractor w/Trades 05131(630)893-4455 CR4298 9/13/126/19/14 6/19/15 MEDINAH, IL 60157 1ST CALL PLUMBING 5301 PISTAKEE DR *SubContractor (Per Trade) 05722(815)403-5081 2013-CR4922 7/29/137/29/13 12/31/13 MCHENRY IL 60051 2 CODE PLUMBING LLC 26042 HALINGS RD *SubContractor (Per Trade) 05297(847)404-3164 2012-CR4472 11/13/1211/13/12 12/31/12 ANTIOCH IL 60007 24 HEATING & COOLING 9008 OKETO DR *SubContractor (Per Trade) 05210(708)229-2293 2013-CR4380 10/16/125/29/13 12/31/13 BRIDGEVIEW IL 60455 2MB DESIGN STUDIO INC 9601 RIVER ST *Gen Contractor/Const Mgr 05410(847)630-8006 2014-CR4591 2/7/134/21/14 12/31/14 SCHILLER PARK IL 60176 Contractor Registration List Business Name / Applicant & Address Registration TypeAlt ID Phone # Registration # Orig .
    [Show full text]
  • Indiana Volunteer Lake Monitoring Report: 2009-2011
    Indiana Volunteer Lake Monitoring Report: 2009-2011 Prepared by: Sarah R. Powers and William W. Jones School of Public and Environmental Affairs Indiana University Bloomington, IN January 2012 Prepared for: Indiana Department of Environmental Management Office of Water Quality Indianapolis, IN January 2012 ii ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS The chemical analysis of water samples is a labor-intensive process. The total phosphorus and chlorophyll a results in this report would not have been possible were it not for the capable help and skills of many SPEA graduate research assistants who conducted the analyses. Julia Bond provided GIS graphics assistance as well as much needed support with training this past year. Julia has also put in countless hours updating the volunteer portion of our website to make it much more user friendly. Funds for this program were provided by Section 319 Lake Water Quality Assessment Grants from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. Laura Bieberich of the Indiana Department of Environmental Management was the Project Officers. Most importantly, THANK YOU to all our volunteer lake monitors! Your hard work and dedication contribute greatly to the understanding and sound management of Indiana’s lakes. 2009-2011 Volunteers by County BROWN COUNTY Jack Carr Bonar Lake Quinn Hetherington Cordry Lake Troy Turley Center Lake David Jarrett Sweetwater Lake John Bender Diamond Lake Buzz Settles Sweetwater Lake Sandra Buhrt Elizabeth Lake Chuck Brinkman Irish Lake ELKHART COUNTY Jeff & Pam Thornburgh James, Oswego, & Gordon Mills Heaton
    [Show full text]
  • Curt Teich Postcard Archives Towns and Cities
    Curt Teich Postcard Archives Towns and Cities Alaska Aialik Bay Alaska Highway Alcan Highway Anchorage Arctic Auk Lake Cape Prince of Wales Castle Rock Chilkoot Pass Columbia Glacier Cook Inlet Copper River Cordova Curry Dawson Denali Denali National Park Eagle Fairbanks Five Finger Rapids Gastineau Channel Glacier Bay Glenn Highway Haines Harding Gateway Homer Hoonah Hurricane Gulch Inland Passage Inside Passage Isabel Pass Juneau Katmai National Monument Kenai Kenai Lake Kenai Peninsula Kenai River Kechikan Ketchikan Creek Kodiak Kodiak Island Kotzebue Lake Atlin Lake Bennett Latouche Lynn Canal Matanuska Valley McKinley Park Mendenhall Glacier Miles Canyon Montgomery Mount Blackburn Mount Dewey Mount McKinley Mount McKinley Park Mount O’Neal Mount Sanford Muir Glacier Nome North Slope Noyes Island Nushagak Opelika Palmer Petersburg Pribilof Island Resurrection Bay Richardson Highway Rocy Point St. Michael Sawtooth Mountain Sentinal Island Seward Sitka Sitka National Park Skagway Southeastern Alaska Stikine Rier Sulzer Summit Swift Current Taku Glacier Taku Inlet Taku Lodge Tanana Tanana River Tok Tunnel Mountain Valdez White Pass Whitehorse Wrangell Wrangell Narrow Yukon Yukon River General Views—no specific location Alabama Albany Albertville Alexander City Andalusia Anniston Ashford Athens Attalla Auburn Batesville Bessemer Birmingham Blue Lake Blue Springs Boaz Bobler’s Creek Boyles Brewton Bridgeport Camden Camp Hill Camp Rucker Carbon Hill Castleberry Centerville Centre Chapman Chattahoochee Valley Cheaha State Park Choctaw County
    [Show full text]
  • Pokagon State Park Guide
    KETTLES AND KAMES The distinctive landscape of Indiana’s Pokagon State Park is a legacy of the most recent Ice Age. Although the Pleistocene Epoch began about 2.6 million years ago, today one can see only the effects of the most recent continental glacier from the Wisconsin age. The irregularly shaped hills, bogs, and lakes are underlain by an assortment of materials that melted from a rugged disintegrating ice sheet a mere 14,000 years ago. Kettle lakes Lake Lonidaw is one of the kettle lakes that formed as the Wisconsin-age glacier retreated. Large blocks of ice broke free from the glacier and were buried under insulating debris. The ice slowly melted, leaving behind a water-filled depression. Morainal landscape The steeply rolling hills, bogs, and interconnected lakes of the park bear witness to the massive ice sheets that advanced over and then melted from this part of the Midwest. & Water Survey. Glacial erratics This former Canadian resident arrived in one of the glacial advances into central Indiana. Many of these trans- ported rocks and boulders, known as “glacial erratics,” are in evidence throughout the park. Lake James THE GEOLOGIC STORY The Northern Moraine and Lake Region, in which Pokagon State Park is located, is noted of Pokagon State Park for its beautiful scenery and lakes — a land- scape created by glaciers. The third largest natural lake in Indiana, Lake James covers 1,140 acres and is 88 feet deep. It is one of the many kettle lakes in the region and was formed by the slow melting of a buried ice block.
    [Show full text]
  • Indiana Muskie Management Report Barbee and Tippecanoe Lakes
    Barbee and Tippecanoe Lakes Kosciusko County Muskie Lakes Lakes Info: Barbee Chain (850 acres) Recent Stockings: Tippecanoe Chain (1133 acres) Barbee Chain 2017, 1,700 Muskellunge Access: Barbee: Public Access located on Kuhn Lake Tippecanoe Chain: 2017, 1,133 Muskellunge Tippecanoe: Pay access on Tippecanoe at Best Fishing: Muskie, Bluegill, Redear, Crappie Tippecanoe Dance Hall, Public access at Grassy Creek* DNR Contact Information: Fishing Regulations: Statewide Tyler Delauder, Assistant Fisheries Biologist D3 *Have to boat under culvert, use best judgement 1353 Governors Drive, Columbia City, IN 46725 (260) 244-6805; [email protected] Muskie Panfish • Barbee Lakes Chain has produced two 50+ inchers • Anglers often catch 8+” Bluegill targeting them in the that were caught in 2015 and 2017 (IN Muskie Classic spring and fall. Tournament Results). • During a 2015 general fish survey a 10.4” Redear • Muskies average length (tournament results) have sunfish was collected. been 38.7” at Barbee Lakes and 39.2” at Tippecanoe. • Black Crappies up to 16.8” long were collected during • The current state record was caught in James Lake spring trap netting in 2015. Anglers claim to have (Tippecanoe Chain) in 2002 weighing 42lbs 8oz. success early in spring fishing weed lines and drop- offs. • Both Lake Chains have produced a Muskie Fish of the Year award winner. 16.8” Black Crappie collected from Kuhn Lake 2015. About the Area • Kosciusko County provides a wide variety of fishing opportunities in the area. • Between the Barbee Chain, Tippecanoe Chain, and Webster Lakes there are more than 2,700 acres of Muskie water to fish.
    [Show full text]
  • Pokagon State Park
    Beechwood Nature Preserve - Along the east edge of LOCATION MAP POKAGON STATE PARK the park, Trail 8 crosses the border and enters the 89-acre, Beechwood Nature Preserve, a unit of the POKAGON • 450 Lane 100 Lake James • Angola, IN 46703 • (260) 833-2012 Snow Lake To Michigan and STATE ACRES Land Trust. A 1.5-mile loop continues over PARK 1,260 acres Established 1925 rolling hills of old meadows now sporting thickets of gray dogwoods and remnants of an old apple orchard. From the loop, a short section of the trail continues to the Gate Beechwood parking lot at State Road 127. A boardwalk Entrance Exit 354 traverses a lowland swamp, featuring rare yellow birch, 727 Indianapolis Lake • SNOW LAKE red maple, blue beech and skunk cabbage. James .27 s e il m To 2 6 hwoo 1 To Angola ec d 3 e I B N M Fort a t Trail r, u e Wayne rv te r e 2 Treatment e s a e w r ld Plant P o 7 8 C WETLAND 7 BEECHWOOD HELL’S POINT CHALLENGE NATURE 8 1 County Rd. Bridge 4 Hell’s Point 1 PRESERVE 8 2 Spring Shelter 5 CCC Dams 3 Wetland View 6 Lake Lonidaw 5 ACRES Land Trust 7 (This is not state-owned property.) • The challenge begins & ends at the Nature Center. Group Feather Valley Road Camp • Length is approximately 8 miles. Fremont 5 miles LAKE JAMES Hell's • Difficulty is moderate/rugged. Includes going UPPER BASIN 4 8 4 Point Trine State 3 Recreation Area up 84 stair steps to Hell’s Point.
    [Show full text]
  • Fisheries and Wildlife Management Plan
    FISHERIES AND WILDLIFE MANAGEMENT PLAN for the CATAWBA RIVER BASIN Douglas A. Besler Lawrence G. Dorsey Kinnon B. Hodges Kevin J. Hining Winthrop E. Taylor Robert J. Brown Mallory G. Martin Fisheries Biologists North Carolina Wildlife Resources Commission July 2004 2 TABLE OF CONTENTS Page EXECUTIVE SUMMARY………………………………………………………………………... 4 I. SCOPE OF PLAN………………………………………………………………………….. 5 II. RESOURCE GOALS AND OBJECTIVES………………………………………………. 5 A. AQUATIC HABITATS……………………………………………………………………… 5 1. Habitat Fragmentation…………………………………………………………………… 5 2. Diadromous Fish Passage ……………………………………………………………….. 5 3. Coldwater Streams………………………………………………………………………. 6 4. Brook Trout Management……………………………………………………………….. 6 5. Upper Catawba River……………………………………………………………………. 7 6. Linville River……………………………………………………………………………. 7 7. North Fork Catawba River………………………………………………………………. 7 8. Cool- and Warmwater Streams………………………………………………………….. 7 9. Lake James Reservoir…………………………………………………………………… 8 10. Lake James Tailwater and Catawba River Bypass……………………………………… 8 11. Johns River………………………………………………………………………………. 9 12. Lake Rhodhiss……………………………………………………………………………. 9 13. Lake Hickory…………………………………………………………………………….. 10 14. Oxford Tailwater…………………………………………………………………………. 10 15. Lookout Shoals Reservoir………………………………………………………………... 10 16. Lake Norman…………………………………………………………………………….. 11 17. South Fork Catawba River……………………………………………………………….. 12 18. Mountain Island Lake……………………………………………………………………. 12 19. Lake Wylie……………………………………………………………………………….. 12 20. Nonnative Aquatic Vegetation……………………………………………………………
    [Show full text]
  • Indiana Geographic Code for Vital Records Developed by Mis (Eis) Effective 1988 – Revised January 1988
    INDIANA GEOGRAPHIC CODE FOR VITAL RECORDS DEVELOPED BY MIS (EIS) EFFECTIVE 1988 – REVISED JANUARY 1988 CODE COUNTY & CODE COUNTY & CODE COUNTY & NO. CITY NO CITY NO CITY 01000 ADAMS 02000 ALLEN (cont.) 03000 BARTHOLOMEW (cont.) 01001 Berne 02032 Maples 03022 Petersville 01002 Bobo 02033 Meadowbrook 03023 Rugby 01003 Ceylon 02034 Milan Center 03024 Saint Louis Crossing 01004 Decatur 02035 Monroeville 03025 South Bethany 01005 Geneva 02036 New Haven 03026 Taylorsville 01006 Honduras 02037 Nine Mile 03027 Walesboro 01007 Linn Grove 02038 Parkerdale 03028 Waymansville 01008 Magley 02039 Poe 03029 Waynesville 01009 Monmouth 02040 Prairie Switch 01010 Monroe 02041 River Haven 01011 Perryville 02042 Rolling Green 04000 BENTON 01012 Peterson 02043 Sand Point 01013 Pleasant Mills 02044 Sunnymede 04001 Ambia 01014 Preble 02045 Thurman 04002 Atkinson 01015 Steele (Salem) 02046 Tillman 04003 Barce 01016 Williams 02047 Times Corner 04004 Boswell 02048 Townley 04005 Chase 02049 Wallen 04006 Dunn 02000 ALLEN 02050 Wayne Haven 04007 Dunnington 02051 Waynedale 04008 Earl Park 02001 Aboit 02052 West Suburban 04009 Foresman 02002 Adams 02053 White Swan 04010 Fowler 02003 Anthony Wayne Village 02054 Woodburn 04011 Free 02004 Arcola 02055 Yoder 04012 Freeland Park 02005 Ari 02056 Zanesville (PT) 04013 Gravel Hill 02006 Baer Field 02057 Zulu 04014 Handy 02007 Bass 04015 Lochiel 02008 Casad Engineer Depot 04016 Otterbein (PT) 02009 Cedarville 03000 BARTHOLOMEW 04017 Oxford 02010 Cuba 04018 Raub 02011 Dixon 03001 Azalia 04019 Sheff 02012 Dunfee 03002 Bakalar
    [Show full text]
  • Living the Lake Life: Indiana's Lake James in the 1950S and 1960S
    Butler University Digital Commons @ Butler University Undergraduate Honors Thesis Collection Undergraduate Scholarship 2017 Living the Lake Life: Indiana’s Lake James in the 1950s and 1960s Warren Travis Butler University Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.butler.edu/ugtheses Part of the Leisure Studies Commons, and the United States History Commons Recommended Citation Travis, Warren, "Living the Lake Life: Indiana’s Lake James in the 1950s and 1960s" (2017). Undergraduate Honors Thesis Collection. 414. https://digitalcommons.butler.edu/ugtheses/414 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the Undergraduate Scholarship at Digital Commons @ Butler University. It has been accepted for inclusion in Undergraduate Honors Thesis Collection by an authorized administrator of Digital Commons @ Butler University. For more information, please contact [email protected]. 1 Living the Lake Life: Indiana’s Lake James in the 1950s and 1960s A Thesis College of Liberal Arts and Sciences and The Honors Program of Butler University In Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for Graduation Honors Warren Travis April 24, 2017 2 Living the Lake Life: Indiana’s Lake James in the 1950s and 1960s Tens of thousands of years ago a glacier that covered northern Indiana started to melt. As the glacier retreated, it left hundreds of lakes in northeastern Indiana.1 These lakes eventually gave rise to the phrase “lake life” and have been a center for recreational activities for over a century. “Lake life” has become an important part of culture in northeastern Indiana. Hoosiers will even refer to “going to the lake,” without specifying which lake they are going to.
    [Show full text]
  • Indianapolis, Indiana 1988 DEPARTMENT OP the INTERIOR DONALD PAUL HODEL, Secretary U.S
    ANNUAL MAXIMUM AND MINIMUM LAKE LEVELS FOR INDIANA, WATER YEARS 1942-85 by Kathleen K. Fowler U.S. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY Open-File Report 88-331 Prepared in cooperation with the INDIANA DEPARTMENT OF NATURAL RESOURCES Indianapolis, Indiana 1988 DEPARTMENT OP THE INTERIOR DONALD PAUL HODEL, Secretary U.S. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY Dallas L. Rack, Director For additional information, Copies of this report can write to: be purchased from: District Chief U.S. Geological Survey U.S. Geological Survey Books and Open-File Reports Section 5957 lakeside Boulevard Federal Center, Building 810 Indianapolis, Indiana 46278 Box 25425 Denver, Colorado 80225 CONTENTS Rage Abstract................................................................ 1 Introduction............................................................ 1 Rirpose and scope................................................... 2 Previous work....................................................... 2 Acknowledgments..................................................... 3 Available information................................................... 3 Method of data presentation............................................. 10 Summary................................................................. 18 References cited........................................................ 19 Appendix A: lake-station descriptions and annual maximum and mininum lake levels........................................................... 20 Appendix B: Index of lake stations..................................... 359 FIGURES Figures 1-6. Maps
    [Show full text]
  • Hydrology of Indiana Lakes
    Hydrology of Indiana Lakes By ]. I. PERREY and D. M. CORBETT GEOLOGICAL SURVEY WATER-SUPPLY PAPER 1363 In cooperation with the Indiana Department of Conservation, Division of Water Resources UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE, WASHINGTON : 1956 UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR Fred A. Seaton, Secretary GEOLOGICAL SURVEY Thomas B. Nolan, Director For sale by the Superintendent of Documents, U. S. Government Printing Office Washington 25, D. C. - Price $1.25 (paper cover) PREFACE This report was prepared by the U.S. Geological Survey, Water Resources Division, C. G. Paulsen, chief, under the general di­ rection of J. V. B. Wells, chief, Surface Water Branch. The field work and the collection and tabulation of basic infor­ mation is part of a continuous cooperative program with the Divi­ sion of Water Resources of the Indiana Department of Conserva­ tion, and the preparation of the report was the culmination of this program. The data presented in this report were collected and prepared for publication under the supervision of Don M. Corbett, district engineer, Indianapolis, Ind. The sections dealing with the origin and extinction of lakes, and with ice condition, temperature and evaporation were prepared by J. I. Perrey. The introduction and the sections dealing with basic data on lake levels and stabilization of lakes were prepared jointly by J. I. Perrey and Don M. Corbett. Acknowledgement is made to Charles H. Bechert, Director, Divi­ sion of Water Resources, Indiana Department of Conservation, for furnishing the table for the section on Legal lake levels, and the gage-height hydrographs and for reviewing the report.
    [Show full text]
  • Lake Tippecanoe Kosciusko County Fish Management Report– 2006
    Lake Tippecanoe Kosciusko County Fish Management Report– 2006 Jed Pearson, fisheries biologist Fisheries Section Indiana Department of Natural Resources Division of Fish and Wildlife I.G.C.-South, Room W273 402 W. Washington Street Indianapolis, IN 46204 2006 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY Lake Tippecanoe and the Oswego basin is an 851-acre natural lake located 2 miles west of North Webster. A state-owned boat ramp is available on Armstrong Road. Lake Tippecanoe is moderately fertile, although the main basin is less fertile. During summer, enough oxygen for fish in the top 15-20 feet. Eurasian water milfoil is the dominant aquatic plant and is treated with herbicides. Eel grass has become more common, while spatterdock and water lilies are scarce. Recent fish management efforts have centered on muskie stockings and imposition of bass size limits. To obtain information on the fish community, a survey was done on June 19-22, 2006. Effort included 75 minutes of electrofishing, nine gill net lifts, and nine trap net lifts. During the survey, 988 fish were collected and total weight was 576 pounds. Bluegills dominated the catch by number (39%), followed by largemouth bass (13%), and gizzard shad (13%). Carp ranked first in weight (17%), followed by bass (13%) and shad (11%). Bluegills were 2.0-8.5 inches long, but the electrofishing catch rate was very low. Bass were 4.1-17.7 inches long but only six were legal-size. No muskies were captured. Lake Tippecanoe has a diverse and relatively stable fish community. The survey results suggest the average size of bluegills may have increased over the past 10 years but the percentage of 14-inch and larger bass remains low despite imposition of size limits.
    [Show full text]