Fishing changes just like the seasons. Don't miss out on this list of must-have bass baits!
Sometimes, it can be challenging for anglers to catch fish when the weather shifts from Summer to Fall. Changes in barometric pressure can make fish swim to different depths, and when a cold front comes in, you might not catch any fish at all.
Although the weather and temperatures can be quite unpredictable, there are certain techniques that can enhance your chances of landing a sizable…
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Jigging is one of the most active fishing methods, requiring you to snap or pop the rod tip up quickly to move the lure vertically in the water column. There seems to be one thing most anglers do that isn’t quite right. That’s how they fish a jig. Most fish it faster then they should. Jigging can produce a nice quantity of bass but it’s main goal is to produce quality bass.
Jigging is the form of…
Say “halo” to the angel shark! This fintastic flat shark is an ambush predator, patiently waiting beneath the surface of the sandy seafloor, prepared to pounce on unsuspecting prey.
To feed this young shark, our Animal Care staff dangle a delicious delight (baitfish) just above the shark’s head. Once detected, the angel shark lunges, quickly snagging the fish with her jaws and gulping it down whole. Talk about fast food!
This is like holding me at gunpoint and asking me to choose my favorite child
I'm gonna go with location bias and give a shoutout to my beloved kelp forests, and temperate nearshore waters in general. The richness of temperate waters is often overlooked, but the diversity of algae and invertebrates supports and amazing web of life. Plus, every layer of a kelp forest has a densely packed, intricate layer of things to peer into to really parse apart different microecosystems. Perch, rockfish, smaller baitfish, lobster in holdfasts, nudibranchs on kelp stalks, kelpfish amongst the fronds, sea lions and otters whizzing by, snails and anemones littering the holdfasts, and of course, our trans kings, the Sheepshead wrasse, all together for just an absolutely amazing show in the kelp.
Having a state marine preserve within walking distance of me for freediving certainly makes me a bit biased here LOL
The being said, the sheer deep blue of pelagic zones has an almost intoxicating allure to me, and I get periodic bouts of deep sea mania so. So there's also all that lol
Descended from planktonic krill seeded into the oceans of HP-02017, the shrish were the first clade to truly explode in diversity in the seas of the Rodentocene and the Therocene. Even as the marine snails and the aquatic hamsters later joined the diversity of the seas and muscled out the shrish in many niches, the shrish nonetheless remain extremely abundant and diverse in the Middle Temperocene. Colorful shallow-water species abound in the reefs, while shoals of baitfish-like species swarm in huge clusters in the open sea. The ocean depths are the final refuge of the gigantic megaprawns, once dominant predator of the sea, and on the beaches and shores are terrestrial shrish that have made a foray onto dry land: the strong-limbed, stocky-bodied shrabs, following a path so many crustaceans have done before. Yet there was one frontier left unexplored: the air.
Unexplored, that is, until the Early Temperocene, when an unusual clade of shrish emerged that developed a novel way of escaping predators in the water: while swimming primarily through the paddling of its abdominal legs, a rapid vertical undulation of its tail fin could provide a speed boost that launches it out of the surface. Once airborne, two side flaps of the tail fin and three pairs of modified thoracic legs spread out into a gliding surface, with a flat arrow-shaped head adding lift and aerodynamicity, allowing the flying shrish -- the wavedarts -- to remain airborne for several meters, in flights that can last as long as twenty seconds, enough to carry them far away from a would-be attacker.
But they are not entirely free from danger, for some predators have caught wind of their tricks and evolved to ambush them while in the air. Seagoing ratbats amd pterodents can make easy meals of an airborne and vulnerable wavedart, seizing them before they can re-enter the water. And one predator in particular borrows the wavedarts' own strategy and uses it against them: the pelagic capeskwoids.
Equipped with webbing between their arms and broad, flat body fins, capeskwoids are equally capable of gliding: specifically to ambush wavedarts midair. Their siphon faces to the rear, allowing them to jet forwards and launch themselves at prey, while their arms are spread wide like a net while gliding, wrapping around and ensnaring its quarry when it makes contact with them midair. Restraining the prey with six powerful arms, the capeskwoid then deals the finishing blow with its harpoon-like radula, before dropping back into the water to begin its meal.
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How will the local trout population effect the local trout population in chicago!!
Trout.
a generic common name for numerous species of carnivorous freshwater ray-finned fishes belonging to the generaOncorhynchus, Salmo and Salvelinus, all of which are members of the subfamily Salmoninae in the family Salmonidae. The word trout is also used for some similar-shaped but non-salmonid fish, such as the spotted seatrout/speckled trout (Cynoscion nebulosus, which is actually a croaker).
Trout are closely related to salmon and have similar migratory life cycles. Most trout are strictly potamodromous, spending their entire lives exclusively in freshwater lakes, rivers and wetlands and migrating upstream to spawn in the shallow gravel beds of smaller headwatercreeks. The hatched fry and juvenile trout, known as alevin and parr, will stay upstream growing for years before migrating down to larger waterbodies as maturing adults. There are some anadromous species of trout, such as the steelhead (a coastal subspecies of rainbow trout) and sea trout (the sea-run subspecies of brown trout), that can spend up to three years of their adult lives at sea before returning to freshwater streams for spawning, in the same fashion as a salmon run. Brook trout and three other extant species of North American trout, despite the names, are actually char (or charr), which are salmonids also closely related to trout and salmon.
Trout are classified as oily fish[1] and have been important food fish for humans. As mid-level predators, trout prey upon smaller aquatic animals including insects, crustaceans, baitfish and tadpoles, and themselves in turn are also important staple prey items for many wildlifes including brown bears, otters, raccoons, birds of prey (e.g. sea eagles, ospreys, fish owls), gulls, cormorants and kingfishers, and other large aquatic predators. Discarded remains of trout also provide a source of nutrients for scavengers, detrivores and riparian florae, making trout keystone species across aquatic and terrestrial ecosystems.