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CLUB RECORDS |
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Walleye
Identifying characteristics: |
Identifying characteristics:
Two dorsal fins separated into a spiny
and a soft-rayed portion, cloudy eye, white tips on anal and lower caudal
fins, canine teeth.
COMMON NAMES: Walleye, Pickerel, Yellow pike,
Wall-eyed pike
SCIENTIFIC NAME: Stizostedion vitreum vitreum
IDENTIFICATION: The walleye has a long slender body
with a yellow-olive color with a brassy overcast on the sides.
The tail fin has a white spot on the bottom edge. The eye is
large and cloudy, and there is a dark blotch on the webbing
between the last three spines of the first dorsal fin. The mouth
is filled with sharp canine teeth. The walleye looks similar to
the sauger and saugeye.
RANGE
AND HABITAT: The walleye is native to Michigan but
historically was only found in the Great Lakes. However, walleye
have now been stocked into a number of larger reservoirs around
the state. Walleye prefer clear to slightly turbid waters. They
usually occur in greatest abundance over reefs, shoals of
gravel, bedrock, and other firm bottoms.
LIFE
HISTORY: Walleye spawn throughout the month of April
when water temperatures are between 40 and 55° F. Walleye are
free spawners that deposit their eggs in the riffle areas of
tributary streams or over gravel to boulder-sized rocks in reef
areas of Lake Erie. The eggs hatch in about 10 days. Females can
lay as many as 400,000 eggs. Young walleye feed on zooplankton
and insect larvae for most of the first year. Following this
stage the young shift to a diet of small fish. Adults in lake
Erie feed mainly on emerald shiners, gizzard shad, alewives and
rainbow smelt. When these species are not available they will
feed on almost any suitable sized prey. Adult walleye feed
primarily during low-light intensity periods of the day (sunrise
and dusk).
ADULT
SIZE: Walleye average 2 to 4 pounds and are between 14
and 22 inches. The state record walleye weighed 15.95 pounds and
measured 33 inches in length.
FISHING METHODS: Walleye will bite a variety of lures.
Some of the more popular lures and methods include bottom
bouncers with a nightcrawler harness, casting weight forward
spinners with worms, and controlled depth trolling with
crankbaits or spoons. Anglers are usually more successful during
low-light intensity time periods.
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