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Message Subject: Musky Coloring | |||
curleytail |
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Posts: 2687 Location: Hayward, WI | Typically it seems like muskies that come from dark stained water tend to be more of a solid, olive/brown color, and those coming from clear water are lighter in color with more detailed markings. However, some areas seem to have muskies with different types of markings on them (Vilas county muskies seem like some of the prettiest to me with green backgrounds and more striking white lines). How much of a fish's coloring depends on the water conditions they live in vs the genetics/strain of fish? Tucker | ||
Flambeauski |
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Posts: 4343 Location: Smith Creek | Seems to me that some strain's coloring are resistant to conditions and some are not. Take LL strain and stick them in coffee stained water and they stick out like a sore thumb. Shoepeks are another that's green no matter where they live. Difficult to say on a lot of our waters that have had 10 different strains put in over the years. I've caught barred in the TFF where they are traditionally green on green, but it's been stocked extensively with different strains. Some old pics of Chequamegon Bay spots all look the same, whether they lived on rocks in the bay or weeds in the river. | ||
esoxaddict |
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Posts: 8782 | Here's what I've noticed: 1. Coffee colored water produces coffee colored fish 2. Muddy water without much clarity produces light colored fish with very few markings 3. Clear water produces fish with very pronounced markings But then I've caught fish from the same area that were radically different from each other in color AND markings. That I am thinking is genetics - different strain of fish. Nearly all the fish I've caught in N/WI are that same greenish brown color, but every once in a while you get one with beautiful markings. Leech strain fish always have spots and always seem to be the same color, though. But they all smell the same... Weird fish they are. | ||
JKahler |
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Posts: 1288 Location: WI | I've caught leechers that are olive gray on the sides with spots, and ones that are very light colored in the same lake. Another local lake the leechers are very light colored, almost albino. In the St Louis river I've caught WI strain in a number of different color patterns. Even caught a fish in a small WI lake that was bright gold! Wish I would have taken a picture of that one! | ||
Flambeauski |
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Posts: 4343 Location: Smith Creek | esoxaddict - 7/31/2013 4:48 PM Here's what I've noticed: 1. Coffee colored water produces coffee colored fish 2. Muddy water without much clarity produces light colored fish with very few markings 3. Clear water produces fish with very pronounced markings But then I've caught fish from the same area that were radically different from each other in color AND markings. That I am thinking is genetics - different strain of fish. Nearly all the fish I've caught in N/WI are that same greenish brown color, but every once in a while you get one with beautiful markings. Leech strain fish always have spots and always seem to be the same color, though. But they all smell the same... Weird fish they are. Lundbob's 53 came out of coffee colored water. Weird indeed. | ||
dtaijo174 |
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Posts: 1169 Location: New Hope MN | Flambeauski - 7/30/2013 1:11 PM Shoepeks are another that's green no matter where they live. I have never caught a green shoepack strain fish. All have been brown with brown belly spots being the big key indicator. That includes fishing Shoepack lake. What a hike that was... | ||
Flambeauski |
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Posts: 4343 Location: Smith Creek | Pretty green if you ask me. In this stocked lake they run from a little golden to GREEN. Wish I had (digital) pics of one I caught, it was like a pike without spots. Attachments ---------------- Wisconsin07%2000005.jpg (66KB - 457 downloads) 4937_4a5e3ed2acc0c.jpg (25KB - 790 downloads) | ||
Flambeauski |
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Posts: 4343 Location: Smith Creek | 2nd pic was taken from another website, author said he was fishing Shoepack Lake. | ||
dtaijo174 |
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Posts: 1169 Location: New Hope MN | They may be green in certain lakes. I'm not disputing that. just saying I've caught brown ones. I'll try to remember to post a pic of a few shoepackers i boated (wrong computer). One thing is for sure, they do change their markings. That adds to the cool factor IMO! | ||
Flambeauski |
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Posts: 4343 Location: Smith Creek | No doubt. Just when you think all muskies on a body of water have a certain color pattern you catch an oddball that's completely different than every other fish you've caught there. My completely uneducated opinion is that its genetics. | ||
curleytail |
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Posts: 2687 Location: Hayward, WI | I have to wonder if it's genetics too. Most of the fish I catch tend to be fairly boring in color, with most of the fish being light olive green to darker brown, and very few markings. Have not caught a lot of fish from gin clear water, but many on only slightly stained water. I have caught a couple on very very clear water that were still quite bland in coloring, but a few in stained water that had pronounced markings. My two biggest fish came from different lakes. One very clear and one "mostly" clear, in two counties about an hour apart. They had somewhat similar colors and markings. It seems like I've noticed certain size structures having similar color patterns. Also makes me think the coloring is strain related. | ||
Brew city baits |
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Posts: 3 | There are hybread musky's as well as tiger musky! Well in wisconsinwe do! | ||
CiscoKid |
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Posts: 1906 Location: Oconto Falls, WI | I think it is a combination of both genetics and the water color. Example 1 - Genetics - A lake I fish frequently has two distinctive types of fish in it. One are the greenish hued fish, and from what someone told me (I cannot verify validity) is those fish were stockers. They fight ok, but nothing out of the ordinary. The other type of fish in this lake tend to be more straight brown with brown belly spots. These are to be from the "native" strain. These fish, every one of them, fight like the dickens. It is crazy to see the difference between the two. Example 2 - Water color - Pretty sure majority of coloring is dictated by water color, and to take it further the surroundings in that lake. Fish in the same lake have very different coloring. Those that tend to stay in weeds and around timber and other structure tend to have very distinctive markings. However fish that spend their lives in open water on those same lakes tend to be more of a solid coloring. Also fish have the ability to change their coloring based on surrounding. Think of trout/salmon coming in from the big water, and those that have been in the water awhile. The fresh run almost always are brighter in color, and have fewer markings. Those that have been in a while tend to be darker in coloring. Also think of fish you are keeping to eat. If you have a light colored livewell they usually end up being very light in color compared to how they were when you first threw them in there, and if you have a dark colored livewell sometimes the fish will actually end up getting darker in color. | ||
Larry Ramsell |
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Posts: 1291 Location: Hayward, Wisconsin | Travis: I agree with both of your examples and would like to add another observation. In "some" waters, where the muskies have been stocked, they seem unable (at least from my observations) to modify color for camo...the water I'm referring to is very dark, but almost all of the muskies are WHITE! They actually almost glow when seen following a lure. I don't know if it is the chemistry of the water that causes this OR the possibility that them being white in that water body makes them less visible to their prey. Doesn't seem to affect their ability to grow to good size and all are very healthy. Also, in an area where two major muskie rivers come together, coloration can be quite different; one river being darker/muddier and the other clear/clean. Very easy to tell them apart. | ||
yoopertrout |
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Posts: 39 | I've noticed that, in one body of water that I fish, the smaller fish are heavily barred, and the larger fish have only faint barring toward the back. Not sure if this is common. | ||
Flambeauski |
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Posts: 4343 Location: Smith Creek | Larry Ramsell - 2/2/2014 9:14 AM Travis: I agree with both of your examples and would like to add another observation. In "some" waters, where the muskies have been stocked, they seem unable (at least from my observations) to modify color for camo...the water I'm referring to is very dark, but almost all of the muskies are WHITE! They actually almost glow when seen following a lure. I don't know if it is the chemistry of the water that causes this OR the possibility that them being white in that water body makes them less visible to their prey. Doesn't seem to affect their ability to grow to good size and all are very healthy. . But doesn't this example contradict the 2nd example Travis gave? If environmental conditions caused muskies to change colors wouldn't these fish do so? I have a pretty good idea of the lake and fish you are referring to, they stick out like sore thumb. I don't believe fish can will their colors to change, nor do I believe that patterns change due to their surroundings, as I've seen too many examples of muskies caught several times in several different locations and their markings were exactly the same, whether it was caught from open water or weeds or rocks. Trout and salmon (or fish in the livewell) are going through physiological changes which causes them to gain or lose pigment. Edited by Flambeauski 5/28/2014 9:50 AM | ||
dtaijo174 |
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Posts: 1169 Location: New Hope MN | I think they change color to match their surroundings + genetics. the leech lake strain stocked in Minnetonka look night and day different than the leech lake musky from leech lake. Also, the little musky in my tank change color in seconds when stressed out or just when I flip the light on from dark. Actually almost all the fish in my fishtank change color when I turn the light on. | ||
Flambeauski |
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Posts: 4343 Location: Smith Creek | First off, I'd guess its more your perception of their color changing with the increase or decrease of lighting. Unless it happens well after the lighting has been altered. I can get behind some color alteration occurring due to water tint, but I've yet to see bars or stripes increase in boldness or form on a fish that didn't have them previously. More often they fade, like yoopertrout observed. If anyone has pics of a muskie caught multiple times where the markings increased rather than faded or stayed the same I'd love to see them. | ||
achotrod |
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Posts: 1283 | Flam fish in a fish tank absolutely change color after you turn the lights on. When its dark they tend to lighten up, and after a couple minutes with the lights on darken to their normal coloring. Their markings never change though except getting lighter or darker. In the WI lakes I fish I have seen every color/pattern. The chain has crystal clear lakes and very stained lakes. We have caught Green, brown/gold, barred, spotted and tigers on all the lakes. I dont think the water color made any difference. | ||
dtaijo174 |
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Posts: 1169 Location: New Hope MN | Flambeauski - 5/28/2014 1:07 PM First off, I'd guess its more your perception of their color changing with the increase or decrease of lighting. Unless it happens well after the lighting has been altered. I can get behind some color alteration occurring due to water tint, but I've yet to see bars or stripes increase in boldness or form on a fish that didn't have them previously. More often they fade, like yoopertrout observed. If anyone has pics of a muskie caught multiple times where the markings increased rather than faded or stayed the same I'd love to see them. haha no... not perception. From a Dark tank, turn the light on the bars/spots coloring is darker. You can watch the bars/spot coloring lighten over I'm guessing 10-15 seconds. My natural muskies did this too. I can't prove if since we can't own them in MN anymore. It was less obvious than my bass, sunnies, crappie and even walleye, but they did it. All the bass I have owned changed color very rapidly and boldly. A happy bass has a rich vibrant dark pattern down the side and over his back. Drop in 10X more minnows than he wants and he would turn pale cream in 5 seconds. He would hide on the bottom. On last thought, on lake vermilion I had fish moving on the reefs and weeds that were dark in color. Then later i was fishing an open water spot and getting follows from "blondes." A much brighter coloring. | ||
dtaijo174 |
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Posts: 1169 Location: New Hope MN | Flambeauski - 5/28/2014 1:07 PM First off, I'd guess its more your perception of their color changing with the increase or decrease of lighting. Unless it happens well after the lighting has been altered. I can get behind some color alteration occurring due to water tint, but I've yet to see bars or stripes increase in boldness or form on a fish that didn't have them previously. More often they fade, like yoopertrout observed. If anyone has pics of a muskie caught multiple times where the markings increased rather than faded or stayed the same I'd love to see them. Sorry one more point! Throw a pike into the livewell and check on him in 10mins. they turn pale from stress! | ||
Flambeauski |
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Posts: 4343 Location: Smith Creek | I see stress as more of a physiological reaction than a reaction to the environment. The question is, can one take a muskie, introduce it to a different body of water (different color tint, structure, etc.) and expect the fish to change color or markings to match the environment? And if so why the H are the fish in that coffee colored flowage by Duluth so pale? And why are the fish around Price/Ashland (mostly) clear even though they spend their entire lives in weed choked lakes and rivers? | ||
esoxaddict |
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Posts: 8782 | Flambeauski, I've always wanted to test this theory on a few lakes that I fish regularly. One in particular has the darkest water I have seen. All the fish are brown, almost black. It doesn't matter if they are pike, perch, sunfish, bass... They're all brown. They don't lose their coloration in a livewell, or a bucket. What I don't know is if I were to put them in the lake down the street that is very clear, with a population of light colored fish, if they would eventually lose the brown color, or not. Since it's now illegal to transport live fish from one body of water to another, I will likely never know. | ||
pamuskyhunter |
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Posts: 613 Location: big cove tannery pa | The river I fish is pretty much clear with sandy bottom. The pure strains are a tanish color. But some of the creeks I fish have a green color to it all year long n there more of a darker tan color. Also the tigers have very pronounced side markings on them. Here is a couple to show. Not monsters but fun to catch. Attachments ---------------- 000_0118.jpg~320x480 (18KB - 489 downloads) 35inchnatural001.jpg~320x480 (7KB - 476 downloads) 43INCHMUSKIE.jpg~320x480 (13KB - 463 downloads) | ||
Nershi |
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Location: MN | I have caught leechers from a stained colored lake that were clear with spots, pronounced color with intense patterns, dark green similar to a WI strain and brown. I've always thought it was a combination of genetics and where they spend their time in a particular piece of water. | ||
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