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| Message Subject: Insane growth rate? | |||
| h20wolf |
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Posts: 126 | At the MInc Pittsburgh meeting a member of the fish commision presented info on a fish that was captured in 2006 and was 38.5"/13lbs. They recaptured the fish in 2008 and the fish was 50"/39lbs. It sounded impossible to me but the fish had a pit tag in it. Has anyone else seen or heard of growth rates like this in tagged fish that were recaptured? | ||
| h2os2t |
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Posts: 941 Location: Freedom, WI | Was it near a nuke or chemical plant. | ||
| C.Painter |
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Posts: 1245 Location: Madtown, WI | maybe the big one ate the little one | ||
| Hunter4 |
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Posts: 720 | Where did you say that lake was? | ||
| lpeitso |
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Posts: 633 | Usually a growth rate like that only happens after the trip, and talking to some friends at the bar. | ||
| h20wolf |
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Posts: 126 | Haha definately lake X and I was discussing with another member about the big one eating the other one but it would digest it and poop the tag out. I suppose it's possible that the tag was still in there and in the right place when the scanned it, then she dumped it later. I have an easier time believing that actually. It makes for interesting conversation though. I was just wondering if anyone had info on extreme growth rates of tagged fish that may be onlong these lines. | ||
| PamuskEhunt |
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Posts: 212 | yeah and the high rate of growth is great but the problem is the life span. Fish that grow really fast are nice, but if they only live ten years then the potential for those big fish decreases just as quick as it rises. | ||
| Hunter4 |
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Posts: 720 | H2o, Seriously, thats incredible. I don't know if that is even possible. I'll make some phone calls I work with a couple of fishiers guys maybe they can answer your question. I'll get back to you. | ||
| Muskie Treats |
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Posts: 2384 Location: On the X that marks the mucky spot | That's not possible. It's probably a data error. | ||
| fish4musky1 |
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Location: Northern Wisconsin | Hawkeye - 4/13/2010 2:40 PM >>>That's nothing unusual. "Genetic freaks" have been known to roam the Hayward area since the late 1930's. They are easily identified by their extemely small heads relative to their body length.<<< Are you talking about fish or people? LOL | ||
| thescottith |
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Posts: 444 | Duplicate pit tag used? | ||
| Cowboyhannah |
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Posts: 1460 Location: Kronenwetter, WI | Identity theft? | ||
| Guest |
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| I was referring to the muskies and I should have said that "used to" roam the the waters around Hayward. These "genetic freaks" mysteriously disappeared after 1949. A prime example of their kind is mounted and on display at the Moccasin Bar in downtown Hayward. There is speculation that their kind now reside only in deep water and that they NEVER visit the shallows under any circumstances. Apparently they also possess an intelligence level much greater than the size of their head (brain) would indicate. | |||
| sorenson |
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Posts: 1764 Location: Ogden, Ut | Improbable, but not impossible. Timing is everything when reporting data like these. A fish tagged in the early spring of 2006 and later sampled in late fall of 2008 could have experienced 3 full growing seasons. Four inches per year on adult fish is great growth but certainly not impossible. You'd need the whole story to tell for sure. S. | ||
| PSYS |
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Posts: 1030 Location: APPLETON, WI | It's incredible if it's true... I'm curious, what's the normal growrth rate? I'm assuming the rate tends to slow down once they reach a certain length and/or age...? | ||
| Hawkeye |
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>>>I was referring to the muskies and I should have said that "used to" roam the the waters around Hayward. These "genetic freaks" mysteriously disappeared after 1949. A prime example of their kind is mounted and on display at the Moccasin Bar in downtown Hayward. I'm following you now, Guest. Legend has it that Spray and Johnson caught the last ones willing to visit the shallows. | |||
| sorenson |
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Posts: 1764 Location: Ogden, Ut | PSYS - 4/13/2010 3:34 PM It's incredible if it's true... I'm curious, what's the normal growrth rate? I'm assuming the rate tends to slow down once they reach a certain length and/or age...? 'normal' depends on many factors - growing season length, forage availability, water quality (temps, DO, pH, etc.), forage types, cover available...you get the idea. There usually seems to be some limiting factor(s) preventing this type of enhanced growth - rarely do all the stars align to produce growth like that, but it does occasionally happen. In many waters, big muskies are lucky to put on a half inch to an inch per growing season. They do tend to slow as they reach their 'ultimate' maximum length. Under optimal conditions, this fish could presumably have grown 6, 4, & 2 inches in it's last 3 years, as an example. S. | ||
| Steve Reinstra |
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Posts: 256 Location: MadCity Wisconsin | Muskie growth rates...........This is what I have been told by Wisconsin DNR biologists.........Since 2005 when our club purchased a several hundred Leech Lake strain 11" fingerlings and DNR put in Wis. Chippewa Flowage strain fingerlings the biologists told us that under best circumstances the muskies would grow up to 6" per year until they reach around 36" at which time the growth slows to about 2-3" per year until "full maturity" for that particular fish. As we have caught a few of these fish since 2005 we have found that they are indeed averaging 6" per year growth. One fish, a Chippewa Flowage strain, grew 6.5" per year after we caught it and scanned the PIT tag. | ||
| PSYS |
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Posts: 1030 Location: APPLETON, WI | That's awesome info... thanks, Sorenson! | ||
| MuskyHopeful |
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Posts: 2865 Location: Brookfield, WI | PSYS - 4/13/2010 6:54 PM That's awesome info... thanks, Sorenson! Good looking and smart. What a combination. Kevin | ||
| Will Schultz |
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Location: Grand Rapids, MI | I would love to talk to the biologist because I sure would like to know more about this fish. As Sorno noted the time of initial capture and recap would be nice to know. I would also like to know her age, I assume they took a dorsal spine and aged the fish on the first capture. The origin of this fish, specifically her genetic origin is of interest as well. There are some mixed genetic pure strain with DNA closer to a hybrid than a pure strain. | ||
| Guest |
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| The Hayward area biologist you should talk to is Frank Pratt. Back in 1998 he examined a jawbone found on the shore of the "Chip" that he said belonged to a muskie with a head as large as 19". He went on to say that the jawbone of a muskie is 45% of the head length and the head length is 20% of the total length of the fish. This means the jawbone on a 19" head would be 8.55" long and would represent a muskie 95" long. The surprising thing is that this 95" muskie was aged by Mr. Pratt to be only 15 years old based upon the growth rings at the rear of the dentary portion of the jaw. This fish may have grown 6.3" every single year of it's life. Yes, these Chippewa Flowage muskies are truly something special. These facts can be referenced in the Feb/March issue of Husky Hunter Magazine in the article entitled, "Did A World Record Musky Die Last Season". | |||
| Guest |
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| I'm sorry. I was referring to the Feb/March 1999 issue of Husky Hunter Magazine. | |||
| Guest |
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| Will, that would be great for our MI research purposes! Hopefully it's true, but I'm kind of skeptical. The old cliché, if it seems too good to be true. LOL! I read that article in Musky Hunter and could hardly believe what I was reading too. Pratt also compared those those jaws to Johnson's mount...and guess what...they were from an even bigger fish than the world record | |||
| Guest |
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| What I couldn't understand is that Frank Pratt said this newly found jawbone was just "slightly" larger than the jawbone on Johnson's world record and yet it supposedly was from a muskie with a head as large as 19" and a total length of up to 95"! And what a growth rate. 95" in 15 years? Wow!!! | |||
| Guest |
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| And by the way, have you ever seen a 50" muskie with a head only 10 inches long? This is supposed to be the "normal" head to total length relationship of a muskie according to the Hayward area biologist! A challenge should be made to Frank Pratt to show us an adult muskie with a head that is only 20% of the total length. If he is unable to do so it should prove once and for all that Louie Spray's 1949 mount was a fake and that the record should be disqualified. Spray's 1949 mount had a head to total length relationship very close to 20%. | |||
| mn_bowhunter |
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Posts: 51 | Based on growth data for 5403 muskies sampled throughout Wisconsin the predicted age at 38" is 9. By age 21 the 50" mark is predicted for length. Average maximum length or length at infinity is 53.17" based on the sampled fish. If this fish actually grew 11.5 inches and 26 pounds in 2 or 3 years it is truly above average. I'd be all over that waterbody hoping for more like the one sampled. | ||
| Guest |
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| If you feel that a muskie that grew 11.25" and 26 pounds in 2 or 3 years "above average", how do you feel about the muskie that the Hayward area biologist claims grew up to 95" in 15 years? The Chippewa Flowage is the waterbody you should be spending your time on! | |||
| BM |
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| I think it is kind of interesting that guesty over on the other thread is upset with this guest poster instead of the source of the info.I personally see nothing wrong with these posts as they are just relayed information.I'd like to see MH magazine to do a follow-up article on this because I think this type of misinformation from a DNR biologist is pretty alarming. | |||
| dogboy |
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Posts: 723 | Back when Kevin Kapuscinski was heading up the GB restoration project, we were constantly relaying tag information back to him from the fish we were gettin up there. It wasnt uncommon to end up with 2-3 tagged fish in a day, But the info of those fish, which most of us know grow pretty rapidly in length and girth, showed average growth rates of 3-4 inches a year with one of my fish a little over 5. the fastest one was 45 upon recapture, but the majority of all the fish that we were getting were all in the mid 30's to low 40's range. The time period was when Kevin was really pounding in a lot of fish out there a few years in a row, so there were numerous subjects of the same size in there, you could easilly identify the year classes, and in all of our catches out there you would see the oddballs show up, if there was a low 30 size class, then and upper 30's size class, then a mid 40's size class, you would catch a fish or two that were inbetween those sizes, and they were just porkers! they stuck out amongst all the other fish we would catch. Lookin at all the pictures we have of fish from there there were definitely some Elite of the few that had faster growing rates. Looking at the smaller heads with enormous bodies, or a fish that was 40" but had the head of an ox on it, you know lookin at that fish, that it was designed to be a bada$$. We have gotten some Bigger fish that were tagged, and unfortunately, a lot of those tags are covered in zebra mussels or so much goo that you would just end up rippin the tag out if you tried cleaning it off. and when Kevin left wisconsin there really wasnt anyone relaying that tag info back to us that we were still sending in, so that little program that we found so interesting kind of just died. I think it wouldve been really interesting to see what those growth rates ended up at with some of the larger fish in that system. anyway.... Its like lookin at a kid in junior high that has size 12 feet and hands the size of dinnerplates, but he's lanky as can be, pretty sure once he hits softmore year he's going to be 6'3" and can slam dunk. in my eyes, anything is possible given the right circumstances, if those fish spend a lot of time swimming with their food, constantly eating a rich oily diet, such as shad, which probably digest very quick compared to a hearty sucker or pile of perch, im sure that those fish that are in those circumstances are going to shine above their counterparts. Id post some pictures of GB fish, but im sure everyone here knows what they look like Edited by dogboy 4/16/2010 7:10 AM | ||
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