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Striped Bass
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Striped Bass
(Morone saxatilis)
Common Names
- striper, rockfish, rock, linesides.
Description
- The striper is the largest member of the temperate
bass family. Body coloration is olive-green to blue-gray
on the back with silvery to brassy sides and white on
the belly. It is easily recognized by the seven or eight
prominent black uninterrupted horizontal stripes along
the sides. The stripes are often interrupted or broken
and are usually absent on young fish of less than six
inches. The striper is longer and sleeker and has a
larger head than its close and similar looking relative,
the white bass, which rarely exceeds three pounds.
Subspecies
- There are no recognized subspecies.
Range
- The striper on the Atlantic Coast has a range from the
Gulf of St. Lawrence, N.Y. to the St. Johns River in
northern Florida and in the Gulf of Mexico from western
Florida to Louisiana.
Habitat
- All Florida populations of striped bass are river
dwellers rather than anadromous (normally living in salt
or brackish waters, but entering freshwater streams to
spawn). The species has been widely introduced in
numerous lakes, rivers and impoundments throughout the
world. Stripers prefer relatively clear water with a
good supply of open-water baitfish. Their preferred
water temperature range is 65 to 70 degrees.
Spawning Habits
- Spawns in March, April and May when water temperatures
reach 60 to 68 degrees. Stripers are river spawners that
broadcast millions of eggs in the water currents without
affording any protection or parental care. During
spawning, seven or eight smaller males surround a
single, large, female and bump her to swifter currents
at the water surface. At ovulation, ripe eggs are
discharged and scattered in the water as males release
sperm. Fertilized eggs must be carried by river currents
until hatching (about 48 hours) to avoid suffocation.
Fry and fingerlings spend most of their time in lower
rivers and estuaries. Because striped bass eggs must
remain suspended in a current until hatching,
impoundments are unsuitable for natural reproduction.
Freshwater populations have been maintained by stocking
fingerlings, and, despite initial difficulties in
hatchery procedures for obtaining females with freely
flowing eggs, a modern technique of inducing ovulation
with the use of a hormone has been successful.
Feeding Habits
- Stripers are voracious feeders and consume any kind of
small fish and a variety of invertebrates. Preferred
foods for adults mainly consist of gizzard and threadfin
shad, golden shiners and minnows. Younger fish prefer to
feed on amphipods and mayflies. Very small stripers feed
on zooplankton. Like other temperate bass, they move in
schools, and all members of the school tend to feed at
the same time. Heaviest feeding is in early morning and
in evening, but they feed sporadically throughout the
day, especially when skies are overcast. Feeding slows
when water temperatures drop below 50 degrees but does
not stop completely.
Age and Growth
- Stripers are fast-growing and long-lived and have
reached weights of over 40 pounds in Florida. Sexual
maturity occurs at about two years of age for male
stripers and at four years of age for females. They can
reach a size of 10 to 12 inches the first year.
Sporting Quality
- The striper tends to be an underrated trophy sport
fish among many Florida anglers. However, for fishermen
who have caught this species there is no disputing the
striper is a superstar among freshwater fishes. Live
shad and eels are excellent baits for catching big
stripers. Other popular baits include white or yellow
bucktail jigs, spoons, deep running crankbaits and a
spinner with plastic worm rig. Popping plugs are best
when stripers are schooling at the surface. As a sport
fish, specific bag and size limit
regulations apply,
and you can register a qualifying catch as part of the
Florida Game and Fresh Water Fish Commission's
"Big Catch"
program.
Eating Quality
- Stripers are excellent eating fish and may be prepared
in may ways. Smaller fish are usually fried and larger
ones are baked.
World Record (landlocked)
- 66 pounds, caught in O'Neill Forebay, California, in
1988.
World Record
- 78 pounds, 8 ounces, caught in Atlantic City, New
Jersey, in 1982.
State Record
- 38 pounds, 9 ounces, caught in Lake Seminole, in 1979.
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