Restructured Version of ShareLunker Program




The Texas Parks and Wildlife Department has announced a restructured version of its Toyota Sharelunker program. The revised program will be more inclusive, allowing anglers who catch largemouth bass weighing 8 pounds or more to post photos on social media.

The 31-year-old hatchery program will continue to use bass weighing 13 pounds or more to produce hatchery broodfish and will now accept entries that are not pure-strain Florida bass. Florida bass that have crossbred with native northern bass are called intergrades. Some of those fish also attain huge size.

During the 2017 season, the biggest of five ShareLunkers was an intergrade. It weighed 15.7 pounds and was caught from Caddo Lake by Ronnie Arnold of Karnack. Going forward, intergrade ShareLunkers will be spawned at the Texas Freshwater Fisheries Center in Athens. Their offspring will be stocked in lakes where the parent fish was caught. All huge bass are females.

The revamped program will run Jan. 1-Dec. 31. Fish weighing 13 pounds or more, caught Jan. 1-March 31, will be accepted as broodstock for spawning.

Outside the spawning window, the year-round season will allow anglers to submit information about their catch through a web application in four size categories -- 8 to 10 pounds; 10-13 pounds; 13 pounds or more; and 13 pounds or more with the fish donated for spawning.

In recent years, ShareLunker entries began falling off, though it is unclear whether big fish are no longer being caught in the same numbers during the new millennium or anglers are dissatisfied or felt that entering a fish was not worth the trouble.

In 2012, Florida began its own version of ShareLunkers, based loosely on Texas' program. They call it TrophyCatch, and it recognizes documented fish weighing 8 pounds or more that were caught and released and uses social media to promote the anglers and where the fish were caught. Since 2012, TrophyCatch has documented more than 6,700 big bass.
Many good anglers, or anglers with good places to fish, enter multiple bass each season, trying to beat one another for bragging rights. Fishing guides use TrophyCatch to promote their businesses.

Now TPWD is planning to incorporate the best ideas from TrophyCatch to revitalize ShareLunkers. A full list of changes and new prizes will be announced closer to Jan. 1.

Photo: Sam Koebcke of Austin caught this 13.30-pound bass from Choke Canyon April 26. The fish was 26.75 inches long and 20.75 inches in girth.




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Lake Texoma

Fishing Report from TPWD (May 1)

GOOD. Water normal stain; 67 degrees; 0.33 feet below pool. Striped bass fishing is great on top waters early along rocky shorelines and sandy flats around coves. Watch for birds on the banks and fish the direction the birds are moving up and down the rocks. Live bait is still very effective fishing ledges and humps near the river channels in 35-45 feet of water. The shad spawn is on and catching will only get better. Crappie fishing is good near boat docks and on structure also using electronics to locate roaming fish in 12-15 feet of water. Glo and milk are colors of choice with a crappie nibble tip. Seeing females in the creeks 2-5 feet of water as well. Catfishing is getting better on cut shad and prepared baits anchored on ledges in 40-50 feet of water a few reels off the bottom near rocky banks. Slip cork with a cut shad down the bluffs are producing channel cats preparing to spawn as well. Bass fishing is good using top waters early, spooks or closed face glide baits and fish crawl baits later. Fish are roaming near the beds and hitting white chatter baits as well. Live shad down the bluffs are producing numbers with the occasional big fish off the rocks in 5-8 feet of water. Report by Jacob Orr, Guaranteed Guide Service Lake Texoma. Hybrid stripers are excellent with limits coming on topwaters along the bank early in the morning watching for Egrets. Then switch to swimbaits on flats and points in 10-20 feet of water. Shad are spawning along the banks. Report by John Blasingame, Adventure Texoma Outdoors.

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