Stole Something From The Lake Today...

Trevelyn1015

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College Station & Huntsville, Texas
I caught him today in Lake Conroe(texas)...

He was so pretty I had to bring him home...

yellowbass1.jpg


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Yellow Bass
Morone mississippiensis

yellbass1.gif


Description
The meaning of the word Morone is unknown. The species epithet mississippiensis refers to the Mississippi River from which the species was first described. Although yellow bass are sometimes confused with white bass or young striped bass, there are several distinguishing characteristics. First, the belly may take on a yellow color, from which the species derives its common name. Second, unlike other temperate bass, the two lowermost stripes are distinctively broken just posterior to the middle. Also, the second and third anal spines are approximately equal in length.

Angling Importance
Yellow bass are often found in schools. Like white bass, they may be captured using spoons, spinners, or live minnows. Due to their small size, averaging only about half a pound, and slow growth rate they are not highly sought by most anglers (a trophy fish may weigh one pound or less).

Biology
Yellow bass are often found in schools. Like white bass, they may be captured using spoons, spinners, or live minnows. Due to their small size, averaging only about half a pound, and slow growth rate they are not highly sought by most anglers (a trophy fish may weigh one pound or less).

Distribution
Although native populations do exist in areas of Oklahoma, Texas, and Mississippi, the species was primarily restricted to the Mississippi River from Minnesota to Louisiana. Introduced populations ocurr as far west as Arizona, as far north as Wisconsin and Iowa, and as far east as central Tennessee. In Texas, yellow bass range from the Red River south to the San Jacinto drainage.
 
Um, nice pics, but this isn't realy the best forum to post pics of fish dangling with hooks in their mouths....."ahem".......
 
Trevelyn1015 said:
well, when i fish, i catch and release 99.99% of the time...

this time, i decided to keep one...
I think the point Tokis is trying to make is that some people here might take offense to seeing a picture of a fish with a hook cruelly gauled through it's mouth.
 
well, there are plenty of fish enthusiasts, like myself, who enjoy catching fish as a sport...

anyway, he's a cool fish... now i need to name him...

p.s. - i removed the pic of him dangling on the fishing line.. i apologize. :-(
 
What size tank is he in and have you taken into account and consideration how much food he's going to need every day to eat?
 
he is in a 55 gallon tank, with plenty of shiners and wild guppies swimming around...

if he doesn't eat the sinking shrimp pellets, tetramin, bloodworms, or algae discs that go in there on a regular basis, i will throw some canadian nightcrawlers into the tank for him to eat...

my fish do well..
 
Yellow bass apparently eat small fish and insects, so the wild guppys in his tank will probably be seen as food before long; may i ask what are "shiners"?
 
Tokis-Phoenix said:
Yellow bass apparently eat small fish and insects, so the wild guppys in his tank will probably be seen as food before long; may i ask what are "shiners"?
i hope he eats the minnows... they are infinitely available in the creek, and i have been breeding them...

here are some shiners:

texas_shiners.jpg



here is a red shiner:

new_fish.jpg


i caught all of the above in a local creek...
 
What a beatiful Bass! Nice fish!
Many people catch fish for a hobby. And im sure there are quite a few on this forums. Its what some ppl enjoy.
 
wow, that really isnt 55 gallons of water, seems more like 30, i do recall your other pics from before. You reall should fill that tank up, because with all those fish, and not that much water you will have tons of wastes, and the ammonia can really go high.
 
I’m sorry to say but you're prolly driving that fish crazy keeping him in a tank.
This is a wild fish that is used to hiding from danger in a very open water space. Now you have it in an aquarium where he can't get away from you no matter where it goes. You should know that a 55gallon tank is too small for a bass.

I would put him back… which will be just as illegal as you taking him and putting him in a tank, seeing how you can’t transport fish from one body of water to another. I don’t mean to be an ass, it’s just the way she goes.

Edit: I forgot to mention that your tank is a reck waiting to happen.. why would you keep native fish w/ tropical fish??
 
well, those pics that i posted of the shiners was in a 20 gallon tank...

typically, my native fish and tropical do not mix, but i loaned my buddy my 20 gallon tank, temporarily, while he got his new 100 gallon set up...

as for mixing native and "tropical"... my red tin foil barb has lived with my perch for over a month, and been totally fine... as have my corydoras and plecos...

p.s. - i am positive that it is not a law in texas, that you cannot move fish from one body of water to another... maybe in canada, but not here...
 

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