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Paddle Fish in Raritan
I was fishing the Raritan one evening last week for smallmouths and doing pretty well when I spotted a carcass washed ashore upstream from where I was fishing.
I thought it might be a fawn, but as I got closer I could see it was a very large fish. When I got right up on it I could see that it was a paddlefish . I've been fishing in NJ for decades and this is the only one I've ever seen ! Is this a rare fish in NJ ? Have any of you guys ever seen one in NJ ? |
Re: Paddle Fish in Raritan
Don't think I've ever heard of one in NJ before. You should definitely report in to F&G. On the endangered species list, they're listed as vulnerable. Apparently they're almost in the same category as sturgeon regarding being over fished for their eggs. Would you happen to have a picture you can post? Very rare find.
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Re: Paddle Fish in Raritan
Only thing I've seen close to that prehistoric
are sturgeon....I suppose no pic?? |
Re: Paddle Fish in Raritan
:p
Pics or it didnt happen or tell where this is and ill check out the spot. if it was last week, there wasnt any high water to move the fish from wherever you say it was. |
Re: Paddle Fish in Raritan
Where on the Raritan were you fishing ? A photo would really help, even of a carcass. The big dead fish I have seen on the river usually turn out to be White Amur, aka Grass Carp.
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Re: Paddle Fish in Raritan
Sorry no pictures, I was fishing by the RT. 206 Bridge . Wasn't able to go back the very next morning, but did go the following day with my camera and plastic bags but it was no longer there. Im still using an old flip phone! lol.
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Re: Paddle Fish in Raritan
I was south of the bridge by what I guess is a pump station ! This fish was easily 4ft. long.
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Re: Paddle Fish in Raritan
Sturgeon or big muskie...long way from the Mississippi River Basin to reach the Raritan!
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Re: Paddle Fish in Raritan
I am unaware of Paddlefish ever existing in any NJ waterway, but hey, who knows these days... Personally, I would be more inclined to think perhaps a lost sturgeon found its way up the Raritan river, and they have a pretty good size snout. Is that possible?.
A paddlefish is pretty much unheard of in NJ.. There were some stocked into Pa. and NY state rivers many years ago although they don't reproduce there.. Perhaps one found its way through a maze of rivers and creeks from Pa, or NY waters and wound up in the Raritan... bob From wiki- Habitat and distribution American paddlefish are highly mobile and well adapted to living in rivers.[8] They inhabit many types of riverine habitats throughout much of the Mississippi Valley and adjacent Gulf slope drainages. They occur most frequently in deeper, low current areas such as side channels, oxbows, backwater lakes, bayous, and tailwaters below dams. They have been observed to move more than 2,000 mi (3,200 km) in a river system.[8] American paddlefish are endemic to the Mississippi River Basin, historically occurring from the Missouri and Yellowstone rivers in the northwest to the Ohio and Allegheny rivers of the northeast; the headwaters of the Mississippi River south to its mouth, from the San Jacinto River in the southwest to the Tombigbee and Alabama rivers of the southeast.[23] They were extirpated from New York, Maryland and Pennsylvania, as well as from much of their peripheral range in the Great Lakes region, including Lake Huron and Lake Helen in Canada.[15][16] In 1991, Pennsylvania implemented a reintroduction program utilizing hatchery-reared American paddlefish in an effort to establish self-sustaining populations in the upper Ohio and lower Allegheny rivers. In 1998, New York initiated a stocking program upstream in the Allegheny Reservoir above Kinzua Dam, and a second stocking in 2006 in Conewango Creek, a relatively unaltered section of their historic range. Reports of free ranging adults captured by gill nets have since been documented in Pennsylvania and New York, but there is no evidence of natural reproduction.[31][32] They are currently found in 22 states in the US, and are protected under state and federal laws. There are 13 states that allow commercial or sport fishing for American paddlefish.[26] |
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I will also state how it's unlikely for a sturgeon to be up past the fish ladder. But who knows. That raritan is a crazy place :cool: |
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Many years ago I saw a pitch black Mountain Lion right on my property here in NY state, despite the NYS DEC saying they don't exist here. however they ARE spotted on occasion here in the Southern Tier even photographed, despite what the "experts" say... So a Paddlefish in the raritan??.. Just as likely as a Mountain Lion in NY state I suppose ......bob |
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Maybe someone stocked their own paddlefish into the raritan for the hell of it :D Those mountain lion reports are neat too. |
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Sturgeon are known jumpers and could EASILY launch itself over the fish ladder or bypass the through the opening. |
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