A river smallmouth like they use to be…
This happens a lot in the spring, but not so
much in February… a little white bass tries to take the topwater lure away from
a smallmouth
Some of the readers say they enjoy trying to answer these nature questions I have been throwing out there for the ‘master naturalists’ in the Ozarks. I am not one of them; I haven’t been given my certificate. But you should be able to answer any of these questions off the top of your head. So far, I haven’t missed a one!!!
This
week’s question is an easy one.
Among the black bass, the largemouth and spotted bass are very similar,
but there is one way to tell one from the other which has nothing to do with
color or lines or spots on the body.
How can you distinguish them? What family do they belong to… the bass
family, the perch family the sunfish family or the bluegill family. Answers at end of column.
That
80-degree day a week or so ago in late February helped me do something I have
never done before. I caught
smallmouth bass on a topwater lure in February. I caught a couple of the Kentucky bass and a couple of
largemouth and 20 or 30 white bass on that topwater lure too.
I
was amazed. I hadn’t expected
anything like that. Is this world
going crazy, fish hitting a topwater Rebel lure in February? What is going to happen next? Will morels start coming up in January?
Will snow geese migrate south in July?
Strange things are happening on this earth.
Old
Bolt, my Labrador, and I like to get away in the middle of the week, away from
the day-to-day goings on and the weirdness you encounter in town. Out where I
am a part of the natural world, where it is a little bit like it use to be when
only native Americans lived here, there is stability to go along with the peace
and ambience that makes a man feel like something somewhere is normal. When May
is about to become June and I can camp on a river gravel bar somewhere and wade
out at the lower end of a shoal and catch smallmouth on a topwater lure that
imitates a dying minnow, I am in seventh heaven. But I don’t expect to see that in February, I expect
to see it spitting snow and catching bass in ten or twelve feet of water on
some hairy jig with a rubber crawdad.
And
so I am rightfully troubled, and so is old Bolt. Still you forget there might be a problem when you wiggle
that topwater lure a time or two and there’s a swirl where it use to be and you
lean back on a bent-over rod. The
good-sized bass often don’t make much of a splash at all. Of course these bass weren’t big old
slab-sided frog-eaters. The
biggest brownie that afternoon was only sixteen inches long and I landed one
seventeen inch largemouth. Most
were anywhere from thirteen to fifteen inches long. But that is okay when you are using an ultra-lite spinning
outfit and four pound line.
On
that little outfit a fifteen-inch bass can make your drag sing. When you fish as long as I have, you
get to where you know if the surface lure attack comes from a black bass or a
white. I don’t know how to explain
the difference but there is one.
Smallmouth take that lure and go down deep quickly, while white bass
stay closer to the surface as they fight against the pressure of the rod. But
they do fight!
And
while there were plenty of whites, ninety percent of them males, there were no
really big ones. In that spot twenty
years ago I caught a lot of two-pound white bass, but it doesn’t happen
now. Fishing pressure for those
white bass in that river which feeds the lake is likely ten times what it was
just ten or fifteen years ago, an increasing. While you can’t hurt white bass
populations, those prolific fish are the easiest of all fish to catch, and the
big ones never get thrown back.
Nowadays, the twelve-inchers aren’t thrown back either. I kept my limit of those smallish-sized
whites, took them home and filleted them, skimming the red meat off each,
ending up with two nice sized little hunks of white meat off each fish that fry
up perfect. Everyone else does the
same thing, and that might be the reason that few bigger whites show up there
in the spring. You may hurt the
number of three or four year old whites, but there will always be a million of
the younger ones.
Smallmouth
aren’t like that. You can see the affect of heavier fishing pressure on the
smallmouth. Brownies up in that
stream are easy to catch in the spring, and too many fishermen keep them. Where
those three- to four-pound smallmouth I caught each March in that river were
fairly plentiful ten years ago, they are declining rapidly today. We just
cannot convince certain kinds of fishermen that the smallmouth should be
released. The day I fished, there
were six kayaks up the river, something never seen twenty years ago. Most are young people who just do not
have much of a conservation ethic or much knowledge of those species. Some I
have talked with do not know about river season or the length limit. Too many
of them keep all the smallmouth they catch
.
That
day I saw about twelve boats with two to four Mennonite anglers in each, from
another county. They had grouped
together on a stretch of the river about only a few hundred yards in length,
and they were there to catch fish to eat.
That is fine, but we need to get across to everyone who fishes that
stretch, keep all the fish you want, but turn the smallmouth back. Keeping
largemouth and Kentucky bass is no big deal, in fact the Kentuckies hybridize
with smallmouth and that dilutes the genetics of the river smallmouth over time
so I encourage fishermen to keep all of those. But darn it, you have to know which is which!
It
is long past time for a few years of a “no smallmouth” policy on our
rivers. One of my friends attended
a meeting that MDC biologists conducted concerning smallmouth in Ozark rivers
and when he came back he was very discouraged. “They have no clue,” he said, “young guys who know all they
know from ‘studies’ they have conducted on one or two rivers. As fishermen,
they have little experience.”
Those
of us who have fished for river smallmouth for fifty or more years know how
susceptible the big ones are in the summer, on the small to medium rivers like
the Niangua and the Big Piney. We learned long ago that there are ways to catch
every smallmouth above fourteen inches out of one river eddy in short order, at
certain times of the summer. In many rivers, that is what has happened. My friend has often said, and I agree,
that smallmouth in our Ozark streams should be treated as an endangered
species, as should rock bass, which now are probably at 20 percent of the
number seen in the 1960’s.
You
could allow anglers to keep smallmouth under 13-inches and be okay, but no one
should ever keep one bigger. Smallmouth are a poor table fare, commonly filled
with the little yellow grubs in most Ozark streams, and likely the poorest
eating of any fish. Kentuckies,
which are not a native Ozark fish, could be kept in any number, if modern day
fishermen can learn the difference in the two.
Our
stream habitat is deteriorating badly and fishing pressure keeps
increasing. Thinking there might
be an answer to making the kind of smallmouth fishing I once saw in younger
days where three-pounders could be commonly expected on any float trip is likely
just a dream.
Answer
to quiz… The Kentuckies or ‘spotted bass’ have a very rough, raspy patch on
their tongues like tiny teeth, while the largemouth’s tongue is smooth. They are all members of the sunfish
family.
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