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Wednesday, March 25, 2009
Striped Bass, White Bass, and Hybrids
Category:
Bass
At
Wednesday, March 25, 2009
Striped bass, also called stripers, are silver with 7 or 8 dark horizontal stripes
that are not broken. Their body is longer than white bass and they have 2 patches of teeth on the tongue. White bass are also silver, but they have horizontal black stripes that are unbroken above the lateral line. The lines below the lateral line are barely visible and irregular. The horizontal stripes on a white bass usually stop just short ofthe tail.
The hybrids, a combination of the striped bass and white
bass, have silvery sides with broken horizontal stripes that
are unbroken above and below the lateral line.
Stripers and white bass are very similar. They both
migrate up rivers and streams in the spring. They thrive
in large bodies of water, especially reservoirs. They
primarily feed in schools in open water. Fishermen will
often see schools of bait fish surfacing in open water.
Stripers and white bass will target these large schools of
bait fish and scare them to the top where feeding is fast
and furious.
Striped bass are the largest with many fish being caught
over 30 pounds. White bass in the 1 to 2 pound range
are good-sized fish with few fish
exceeding 3 pounds. Hybrids are bigger than white bass,
but smaller than stripers. Hybrids in the 10 to 15 pound
range are not uncommon, but fish in the 5 to 10 pound
range are considered quality-sized fish.
Striped bass are located mostly on the east coast and in
the south. White bass are found in the south, midwest
and throughout some of the plains states.
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Post By
john
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