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Sportsmen's Club of Lake Vermilion, Inc.
Since 1968, a lake association dedicated to the improvement of Lake Vermilion

A Growing Cormorant Population on Lake Vermilion

Lake Vermilion Cormorants and the Fishery

The double-crested cormorant is a species native to Minnesota. A small number have been present on Lake Vermilion for many years.Cormorant Cormorant nesting was documented on two small rocky islands in northeast Big Bay during the 1990s. Sometime around 2000, cormorants abandoned nesting on those islands and began to nest on Potato Island, a larger 0.60-acre rocky island located near the middle of Big Bay. Rapid population growth followed.

Double-crested cormorants are voracious eaters, consuming a pound of fish per day. Diet studies show they are opportunistic feeders, preying mostly on whatever species is most abundant. On Lake Vermilion, yellow perch and cisco would likely be major targets.

Cormorants have also been known to eat small walleye, although walleye usually make up a small part of their diet.

DNR test netting shows Vermilion's perch population has been on a downward trend for several years at a time when the cormorant population has grown rapidly (see table below). Walleye growth and survival could easily be affected by reduced numbers of perch, an important forage.

The Leech Lake Experience -- A Lesson for Lake Vermilion

For decades, the Leech Lake walleye fishery attracted hoards of fishermen which fueled the local economy. Three miles off the southern shore is Little Pelican Island, 3 acres of rock, sand and scruffy shrubs -- somewhat larger, but otherwise similar to Potato Island in Lake Vermilion. In 1998, the number of double-crested cormorant nests on Little Pelican Island was 73. That number grew to 2524 nests in 2004.

As the cormorant population exploded, yellow perch and walleye populations decreased dramatically. Fishermen went elsewhere, leaving a huge impact on the local economy.

After an agonizingly long wait, a 5-year Leech Lake Action Plan launched in 2005. The plan was a collaboration of federal, state, local and tribal officials and included walleye restocking and cormorant reduction. In three years, over 9000 cormorants were culled, leaving about 500 nesting pairs, the management target.

Leech Lake hosted the Governor's Fishing Opener in 2007, a statement that the fishery was recovering. And DNR test netting suggests a full recovery is underway.

How Does One Count Cormorants?