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Spotted Cat, Blue Channel Cat, Great Lakes Catfish, Lady Cat
41 pounds 8 ounces
Channel catfish have eight barbels (whiskers), an olive-green to bluish body with dark spots, and a deeply forked tail.
Length:
Up to 24 inches
Channel catfish inhabit deep streams, rivers, and lakes in eastern and central U.S., especially in deep stretches of sand, gravel, or rubble bottom. They also inhabit lakes, reservoirs, and ponds. The preferred water temperature is 75-80 °F.
Channel catfish feed on insect larvae, clams, snails, crayfish, crabs, and aquatic plants. They locate food by probing the bottom with their barbels.
When:
Late Spring-Summer
Young channel catfish are called "fiddlers." During the 1950s, commercial fisherman harvested nearly 270,000 pounds of channel catfish each year from the Mississippi River. |