Featured Cat:
The Blue
Catfish

Blue Catfish sketch by Duane Raver

Scientific Name:  Ictalurus catus

Common Names:  blue channel, chucklehead cat, fork-tail cat, Fulton cat, great blue cat, high-fin blue, and Mississippi cat

Current State Record:  61.5 pounds, caught by Vincent Walston, 2/11/96 in the Little Escambia Creek, Escambia County, FL

Florida Range:  Perdido and Escambia River drainages

Description:  Similar in shape to the channel cat, but never has spots.  Color is blue or slate-gray above and light below.  The  back gets darker in tannin waters, almost a blue-black.  Has an elongate anal fin with 30 to 35 rays, a deeply forked  tail, and small eyes.  The head tends to broaden in older fish, but retains a sharpness that the channel cat does not.   The upper jaw protrudes slightly beyond the lower jaw.  Adults have the capability of growing to more than 100  pounds.

Habitat:  In Florida, it only occurs in streams, but could survive well in lakes, reservoirs, and small ponds

Spawning Habits:  In northwest Florida, blue catfish spawn in June and July when water temperatures are 70 to 75 degrees  F.  Eggs are deposited in nests secluded in cavities, under banks, in logs, cans, old tires, and sometimes over open  bottom.

Feeding Habits:  The range of natural foods eaten by the blue cat is wide.  In the early life stage they feed on aquatic worms,  aquatic insects, and their larvae.  Adults feed on fish, frogs, mussels, and other living and dead material.  They are  omnivorous in their feeding, and eat most anything available.

Palatability:  Blue cat have a mild taste when small.  A red streak of flesh at the mid-line tends to taste strong as fish get bigger and age.  The flesh in large fish is mild if the red streak is removed.



WARNING !!!:  Blue catfish are non-native to Florida Enjoy catching them where they now exist, but DO NOT  move the fish to other bodies of water Blue catfish are voracious feeders, and studies have shown them to out compete native species of fish for food Studies have also shown that blue catfish have severely impacted the populations of other native fish species.

 
 

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