Bluegill - Big Bluegill

Do you love big bluegill?

What the heck is it?

Views: 329

Attachments:

Reply to This

Replies to This Discussion

Interesting.  My first guess was tilapia, but the morphology doesn't look quite right.
I gotta go along with Bruce  tilapia, but this thing is a little diffrent then most I've caught
I see tilapia all the time, but I've never seen one that looked like that. If it's a tilapia, it's either a totally different species than the ones I see here in California, or it was caught near the outfall of a nuke plant ;-)

Here is your tilapia. 

 

The first fish in question is a giant gourami and a rather small one at that.  Guess they get to be over 10 pounds.  One tough fish even on heavy bass gear.

Attachments:

Now that's a nice tilapia!

 

Having never heard of a giant gourami before, I googled to learn that it's native range is south and southeast Asia, and that they are kept as aquarium fish. Looks like people are dumping them when they get too big, unless you've been fishing in somebody's aquarium :)

Where did you catch that? Creek, pond, lake, aquarium?

Im guessing you live in Florida or somewhere warm. From the look of it, that's a Gourami. They don't live in temperate waters - the cold gets to 'em.

Many variations of these fish have been imported as aquarium specimens. You can buy small ones at Wal Mart or any pet store and I've kept them on and off over the years. Many people also keep these same fish in their back yard ponds for mosquito control. They will thrive in nothing more than a small wading pool, in fact, throughout the warm season.

Many people even breed them this way, as they are bubble nesters. As the name implies, they build and maintain nests of bubbles to hold thier eggs in still, calm waters. It's fascinating to watch them tend to these nests and keep them floating. In Southeast Asia they are common in rice paddies and the backwater ditches that feed the paddies.

Both Gourami's and Siamese Fighting Fish (Bettas), belong to a group called labyrinth fishes. Their skulls are like a sponge, made up of of many small, hollow cavities. They can take air from the surface and hold it in this spongy "labyrinth" of bone and then extract oxygen from this store of air. This means they can tolerate stagnant waters with low oxygen contents, environments that would kill other fishes.

Larger ones have been imported, certainly, much like the popular Amazon Oscar cichlids. Eventually, people tire of them or release them into the wild for other reasons - where they grow to catchable size. I recall mine would eat small insects and flies; they relish mosquito larvae, for sure. Small lures and jigs that resemble tiny invertebrates should be enough to catch them. You might even be able to get one on a cricket!

I also know that they are eaten in SE Asia as food (which can safely be said of just about everything in Asia). Whether WE might want to is another matter, I suppose.

Fun on a Fly-Rod, I think!!!!!!!

Thanks on all guesses and good info.

 

We were intentionally targeting the fish with a slip float set-up and piece of banana for bait.  The location was Thailand.  As for the fly rod comment, we got several on the fly rod and they were a riot.  Do I dare say a harder fight than (or at least equal to) a big bluegill?

 

Never ate one but imagine they would be tasty.

    

Except for the size of the scales Looks like my Mother in law...   Just kidding Bruce...

(Hers are larger)...

RSS

Latest Activity

John Sheehan posted photos
Wednesday
John Sheehan posted photos
Nov 16
John Sheehan posted photos
Nov 14
John Sheehan commented on John Sheehan's photo
Thumbnail

11cupsawc

"Crappie have always impressed me with the way they look! A very fond memory is the first one I…"
Nov 13
Jeffrey D. Abney commented on John Sheehan's photo
Thumbnail

11cupsawc

"More beautiful golden Fall colors on the Black Crappie…..nice fish!"
Nov 12
Jeffrey D. Abney commented on John Sheehan's photo
Thumbnail

cupsawbg9bs

"Nice gill on the beetle spin!"
Nov 12
Jeffrey D. Abney commented on John Sheehan's photo
Thumbnail

cupsawc

"Like the calico colors of the Fall…..nice crappie John!"
Nov 12
Bruce Tomaselli commented on John Sheehan's photo
Nov 11
John Sheehan posted photos
Nov 10
John Sheehan commented on John Sheehan's photo
Thumbnail

STCrappie

"You bet Bruce! Fishing for an hour to an hour and a half each day I 've been getting three or…"
Nov 10
Bruce Tomaselli commented on John Sheehan's photo
Thumbnail

STCrappie

"About a dozen of those would be great! Nice crappies."
Nov 10
John Sheehan commented on John Sheehan's photo
Thumbnail

466097223_10236349245411317_8266863466993619288_n

"Top: Shimano Sensilite 5'6"Rod /Daiwa Spinmatic Reel. Trilene clear xl 2# test…"
Nov 9
John Sheehan posted photos
Nov 8
Jeffrey D. Abney commented on Jeffrey D. Abney's photo
Thumbnail

Joe’s Personal Best Yellow Perch….11/3/2024

"Thanks Tracy……I was very glad that my son-in-law got this bite….he has been…"
Nov 7
tracy willis commented on Jeffrey D. Abney's photo
Nov 7
John Sheehan posted photos
Nov 5
Jeffrey D. Abney posted a photo

A Flock of Ibis Roost on a Duck Blind Near Back Bay, North Carolina….11/5/2024

These birds pass through and feed in the shallow marshes….cold weather will push them south…but we…
Nov 5
Jeffrey D. Abney commented on Jeffrey D. Abney's photo
Thumbnail

Joe’s Personal Best Yellow Perch….11/3/2024

"Thanks Bruce ….Joe was very excited to get his hands on this perch……I started…"
Nov 5
Bruce Tomaselli commented on Jeffrey D. Abney's photo
Nov 5
Jeffrey D. Abney commented on Jeffrey D. Abney's photo
Thumbnail

Joe’s Personal Best Yellow Perch….11/3/2024

"Thanks Dick….fish like this give you motivation to make a few more casts even on a very…"
Nov 4

© 2024   Created by Bluegill.   Powered by

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service