The
History of the International Wild Trout Symposium
Marty Seldon
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The first International
Wild Trout Symposium was held September 25-26, 1974 at Mammoth
Hot Springs Hotel in Yellowstone National Park. The event was
cosponsored by Trout Unlimited and the Department of the Interior
US Fish and Wildlife Service, based on the idea for the event
that originated with Frank Richardson, TU Executive Director
and past FFF President Pete Van Gytenbeek, John Peters of the
EPA at a 1973 luncheon in Denver.
The concept received
the enthusiastic support of the Assistant Secretary of the Interior
for Fish, Wildlife and Parks, and past FFF Senior Advisor, Nathaniel
P. Reed. The sponsoring group was joined and the Symposium hosted
by Yellowstone National Park's Jack Anderson. Willis King
was also on the Organizing Committee. Over 300 anglers, writers,
students, and professionals from every trout region in the United
States and Canada met on common ground to talk about wild trout
and establish a new tradition.
There were panels
covering Anadromous Species, Water Quality and Quantity, Habitat
and Species, Regulations and Politics and a number of Special
Sessions. Presenters included a number of familiar names such
as Roger Barnhart, Gardner Grant, Ray White, Bob Wiley and our
good friend A. Starker Leopold. Dick Vincent presented his
well-known paper on the effects of stocking catchables on wild
trout populations and Wilfred Carter head of the International
Salmon Federation discussed Atlantic salmon management.
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