I also grew up being told they where introduced for reseach,all i know is that we have caught our share of them in millwood and other lakes, but at the end of the day you cant tell the difference when the grease is hot. ,
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Couple of questions :
1. How is it that the black stripe is a "dominant" trait, when the offspring of a Blacknose & a regular Black Crappie will not have a black stripe ?? Sounds more like a recessive gene trait, to me. And if it was a dominant trait, wouldn't most Black Crappie have it (the stripe)and the non-striped Black Crappie be the "odd" catch
2. When did this fellow say the Blacknose was discovered ? (what year?) The Florida F&W state that the first "discovery" was in OHIO in 1957( Fish and Wildlife Research Institute )
One other statement about Blacknose, that gets some press, is that the stripe runs down the back from mouth to tail. :rolleyes: Funny thing is, none of the pictures I've seen, nor any of the Blacknose that I've caught have a stripe that goes farther than the beginning of the dorsal fin.
Also, there are still people spreading the idea that this is a hybrid fish :o
Another supposed "myth" is that Blacknose don't fight any harder than a normal Black Crappie ... but, in most all instances of me catching one, I've pretty well known that it was a Blacknose, seconds after hookup :p ... not to mention that they are the only Crappie that I've ever caught that have jumped out of the water. And in fact, one actually jumped completely over the front of the boat I was in (Tracker TX17). There hasn't been any instance, for me, in which a White Crappie or Black Crappie has jumped out of the water ... nor has any of these two (of a comparable size) ever did as dogged a run, once hooked, as the Blacknose I've caught. And that's from 50+ years of fishing experiences !!
First time I ever saw one, was over 30yrs ago ... caught by my fishing buddy, from Watts Bar Lake, in East Tenn. Even back then, it was "called" a Arkansas Blacknose !! :D
... cp![]()
I also grew up being told they where introduced for reseach,all i know is that we have caught our share of them in millwood and other lakes, but at the end of the day you cant tell the difference when the grease is hot. ,
I have them in my pond, and the only place, caught several of them out of there, I bought my stocking crappie from a fish farm in Arkansas.
Fair enough. I understand that they are just blacks but with all the discussion and research on them nobody knows for sure if they get as large as the others??? Just thought it would be cool since there was a very distinct difference that they could have a different category, then by some miracle I could catch one and be the first one to weigh it with the state that way I could hold a record for a little bit, that is the only way I would ever catch a record lol.
nothing beats time on the water
I always was told they came from the white river basin...
I've caught them in the oxbows off white,black and out of white,black,spring,strawberry,village creek,lick pond,St.frances,cash river,current.
I do not catch alot of them just one now and then in other words just a few each year.
Without any flood water and low water I expect not to catch many this year,I think they like faster moving clearer water ways.They are the bulldogs when it comes to fighting for there lifes.
Here are a couple of Blacknose crappie from Bull Shoals.
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Mo/Ark slab hunter
Dang,those are the biggest I've ever seen.
good info thanks for the info
fishing from the couch in front of the tv doesnt count
I see no reason why they wouldn't get as large as any other Black Crappie in the same waters. There's nothing about them that would cause them not to !!
I think I read somewhere that ... if they mate with each other, the black stripe will be presesnt on the offspring -- but, if they mate with a regular Black Crappie, then the stripe won't be present.
At Watts Bar Lake, in East Tn, where I fish for Crappie a couple of trips per year ... I've caught Blacknose that were as big as any of the other Black Crappie I've caught there. And some lakes, like Center Hill Lake (Tenn) ... they've gotten to be the primary Crappie, and get bigger there than many of the surrounding waters that have them.
... cp