ARKADELPHIA – More than 11,000 cubic feet of new cover for anglers to fish sits at the bottom of DeGray Lake in Clark and Hot Springs counties, thanks to the efforts of Arkansas Game and Fish Commission staff from across the state. Two-hundred and forty near-permanent fish attractors were dropped in various locations of the 13,800-acre Corps of Engineers reservoir.

The attractor design, originally developed by the Georgia Department of Natural Resources, offers excellent cover for fish. A 3½-foot cube of 1½-inch rigid PVC is constructed, then enhanced with 50 feet of 4-inch black corrugated pipe. The inert plastic lasts decades and is the same materials used in drinking water and water drainage lines.

“Fish of all sizes can use this cover,” Hobbs said. “Algae will form on the surface of the cubes, which attracts baitfish. Baitfish attract larger fish. And the complex cover lets fish get around and even inside of the cube and drain pipe.”

In addition to being popular with bass, bream and crappie, Georgia cubes have proven easy to mass produce and distribute. Biologists were able to distribute 10 such structures at 24 locations stretching from Caddo Bend to Lennox Marcus in one day.

“We had 35 staff members cutting, gluing, tying and sinking these cubes all day, but we managed to complete the project much faster than we originally anticipated,” Hobbs said. “Three specially designed habitat barges worked nonstop, dropping off bundles of cubes.”

Hobbs says this is the fourth large-scale habitat project undertaken by AGFC biologists in the last two years.

“We all add cover whenever we can to our local lakes, but these are all-hands-on-deck affairs that can accomplish in one week what would take a single district an entire summer,”

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