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Common
Name: SMALLMOUTH BASS
Other
Names: SMALLIE, SMALLMOUTH BLACK BASS, BLACK BASS,
BROWN BASS, GREEN BASS
Scientific
Name: Micropterus dolomieu
Origin:
Introduced
Adult
Size: Smallmouth bass commonly live 5-7 years, with
a few individuals reaching ages from 10-20 years. Most
bass waters grow some adults to weights of 2-3 pounds.
In Maine, only a few exceed 4 pounds, and bass heavier
than 5 pounds are rare. The state record smallmouth bass
is 8 pounds.
Identification:
Bass are members of the sunfish family. The upper jaw
of smallmouth bass does not extend beyond the back of
the eye. The notch between the spiny and the soft-rayed
section of the dorsal fin is not deep.
Before
the Civil War, there were no bass in Maine. Records
show that bass were first stocked in Maine in 1869.
The
smallmouth is not actually a bass. It's a member
of the sunfish family but, along with the largemouth,
is called a black bass.
June
is the peak of the spawning season in Maine.
Spawning
will usually take place when the temperature is between
59º F and 65º F.
An
average of 8,000 eggs per pound of body weight is carried
by the female.
Males
build the nest and guard the eggs and young.
The
young smallmouth is more solitary, preferring to feed
alone, while the young largemouth apparently prefers to
remain in schools for at least a part of the first summer.
Favorite
foods are smaller fish and crayfish.
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