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jimb
04-07-2006, 07:29 AM
Dogfish have been an important member of the Mississippi river ecosystem for the last 100 million years. They are not an exotic like the carp or gobie and should not be treated as such. The dogfish is an excellent fish to do battle with and deserves to be released just like bass and northern to get bigger and meaner and fight another day. Below, you will find some interesting facts about the dogfish that stretch all the way back to the time of the dinosaurs.

BOWFIN OR DOG FISH

The bowfin is the only living member of an ancient family, which is the only family remaining of the order Amiiformes. Bowfins are especially well-represented in fossils from the middle Mesozoic era, more than 100 million years ago.

The current species is somewhat of a relic, with a primitive skeleton (part bone and part cartilage) and a double skull (a bony outer layer and a cartilage inner layer), characteristics it shares with members of the gar family. Fishes of more recent ancestry have skeletons made entirely of bone.
Yet the bowfin is an evolutionary step beyond the gars, even though it is an evolutionary step behind more modern fish. While gars have thick, diamond-shaped scales that do not overlap, bowfins have thin scales more like those of modern fishes. They are also the only primitive fish to provide parental care for their young.
Bowfins live in lakes and large slow-moving rivers with plentiful vegetation. They tolerate silt and mud and can survive in warm, stagnant water by breathing air. Most fish use their gas bladders for buoyancy, but the bowfin's gas bladder also allows it to extract oxygen from the air. This ability to breathe air may allow bowfins to burrow in mud to survive drought. A similar behavior is seen in African lungfishes and is called aestivation. Tomelleri and Eberle in Fishes of the Central United States cite farmers in the Mississippi Valley "who occasionally turned up live bowfins with the plow after floodwaters had receded from farmland."



Bowfins reach spawning age within 3-5 years. Males are always smaller than females and probably do not live as long. They spawn in the spring in nests the male has created by biting off the vegetation in an area of 1.5 to 2.5 feet in diameter. Males protect the eggs, and later, the young fish, for the next few months. They are very vigorous in their defense of the nest--biting intruders (including humans) and even propelling themselves out of the water. This flurry of activity stirs up the water enough to hide the young fish, which scatter for cover.
Young bowfin eat phytoplankton, zooplankton, and insects. The adults, however, are voracious consumers of fish, although they will also eat crayfish, small rodents, snakes, turtles, and leeches.
Because of its tendency to eat other fish, including desirable game fish, the bowfin is not generally appreciated by anglers. Yet it is an important part of the ecosystem--it inhabits waters generally populated by panfish or nongame fishes, and its performs the population control necessary to prevent stunting. (See the pumpkinseed description for more information about stunting.) In Fishes of Wisconsin, George Becker states, "The bowfin is frequently part of the fish fauna in many excellent sport and panfish waters in Wisconsin. In fact, the quality of such waters may be attributable in part to the presence of this species."

eyecatcher
04-20-2006, 01:33 PM
A dogfish forum, this is great.

Goosklr
04-20-2006, 03:37 PM
Andy's favorite fish!!

Kris Brantner
04-20-2006, 08:19 PM
and tims second favorite fish, right behing the strong fighting sheepshead! :D

in all seriousness hooking into a big doggie is alot of fun, but most people look down on them because they bite when they are fishing for somethen else. ie bass fishin you think you have a good largie on and it turns out to be a doggie, its kind of dissipointing

lookin4fish
04-20-2006, 08:34 PM
its like catching eelpout. everybodies eyes are wide open and extatic about the fisht till it gets to the hole. a fun fish to catch, but a bummer when you realize you have to take it off the hook. i myself like catching them and eating them, cleaning them is another story.

anyone ever try doggie for dinner??? :D

fishermancory
04-23-2006, 08:27 PM
Its nice to know someone else understands the importance of the dog fish.
Where did you get the information, or did you just know it :confused:

adloos
04-23-2006, 10:10 PM
I personally am not a big doggy fan, it always seems like i am the lucky one to hook into one.

Bass Hunter 01
05-17-2006, 07:30 AM
They are bottem feeders and i have no use for them ever scince i lost that HUGE one at my camp it broke my hook in half i fliped it sat in the same place for over an hour and so did i i'v hated them ever scince they are discusting and vile smelling. thats my input. :mad:

Michaels
04-05-2007, 09:38 PM
I hold the Wisconsin State Record for Dogfish killed with bow. I gotta say I love to kill them

MossBoss
04-09-2007, 08:27 AM
As long as I don't have to touch them they are fine. And they don't bite a spinnerbait, which they usually destroy beyond repair. And they are the meanest fish in the river and will bite your hands and feet at any given opportunity. But other than that they are fine. :D

adloos
04-09-2007, 09:51 AM
Dan, I can tell your a big fan of the dogfish. :D