Catfish Man's News and Views
Joe Crumpton, Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission
601 West Woodward Avenue, Eustis, FL 32726
Phone: 352/742/6438  Fax: 352/742/6461 
E-mail: joe.crumpton@MyFWC.com

Volume V                  June 2002

Editorial:
Spring has Sprung!! The big ones are on the move from Okeechobee to the Panhandle. If you got the itch for that lunker, now is the time to scratch it. A 17 pounder in Dunn’s Creek, a 20 pounder from the Withlacoohee, a 24 pounder in Lake Harris, a 22 pounder from the Choctawhatchee, and a 20 pounder from East Lake Tohopekaliga. That ought to be incentive enough. GET OUT THERE!!!!

  Featured Cat:White catfish

The White Catfish

Scientific name: Ameiurus catus

Other Common Names: Blue cat, fork tailed cat, blue bullhead

Current State Record: 18.9 pounds, caught by Jim Miller, 9/21/91, in the Withlacoochee River, Marion County, Florida

Florida Range: The Florida Panhandle (Northwest Florida) , east to the St. Johns River, and south the Everglades Conservation Areas and canals

Description: The sides are typically blue-gray to blue-black, and are sometimes mottled. When sides are mottled the white is confused with the bullheads. The tail is moderately forked, but not as severely as the blue or channel catfish. The head is more blunt and flattened than the blue or channel catfish. More like the bullheads. The chin barbels are typically white in color, but sometimes yellowish.

Habitat: Whites typically prefer slow sluggish streams, lakes, and reservoirs, however, they survive well in farm and urban ponds. They are able to tolerate more enriched waters than other catfish species, prefer water temperatures between 80 and 85 degrees, and can survive well in relatively high salinity waters.

Spawning Habits: Often both the male and female builds the nest, but it is the male that protects the eggs and fry. A sand or gravel substrate is preferred for nesting, but vegetation and log-like structure is also utilized. Whites begin spawning when water temperatures reach 70 degrees, but prefer waters 75 to 80 degrees. Like most other catfish, all of the eggs are deposited at one time.

Feeding Habits: White cats are somewhat cross feeders. Throughout their lives white cats feed on insects and crustaceans. As they grow older, fish can become a big part of its diet, and at times whites actively feed on vegetation. They are opportunistic feeders usually feeding on what is most available.

Palatability: White cats have a firm, mild tasting flesh. Even larger ones, when filleted or cut in fingers are very tasty.

    

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