The flathead catfish (Pylodictis olivaris), also called by several names including mudcat or shovelhead cat, is a large species of North American freshwater catfish. It is the only species of the genus Pylodictis. Ranging from the lower Great Lakes region to northern Mexico, they have been widely introduced and are an invasive species in some areas. The closest living relative of the flathead is the widemouth blindcat, Satan eurystomus.
Common names
JUMBO Flathead Catfish: Mississippi River, Minnesota - Northwoods Angling - Jakob Hals and Rob Bethke of Northwoods Angling catching some Jumbo Flatheads. Jakob teaches a technique for getting a fish unstuck from a log - it doesn't work how explained but the theory...
The Flathead catfish is known as Yellow cat, Mud cat, Shovelhead cat, Johnnie cat, Goujon, Appaluchion, and Opelousas. The fish is also called Pied cat and Mississippi cat.
Description
Flatheads grow to a length of 155Â cm (61Â in) and may weigh up to 56Â kg (123Â lb), making it the second-largest North American catfish (after the blue catfish, Ictalurus furcatus). The average length is about 25-46 in (64-117Â cm). Their maximum recorded lifespan is 24 years. Males are mature from 16Â cm (6.3Â in) and 4 years of age, while females mature from 18Â cm (7.1Â in) and 5 years of age, but may mature as late as 10 years. The world angling record flathead catfish was caught May 14, 1998, from Elk City Reservoir, Kansas, and weighed 123Â lb 9Â oz (56.0Â kg), however a record from 1982 shows that the flathead catfish would be North Americas longest species of catfish, after a specimen pulled from the Arkansas river that measured 175Â cm (69 in.) and weighed 63.45Â kg (139Â lbs and 14oz.).
Distribution and habitat
Their native range includes a broad area west of the Appalachian Mountains encompassing large rivers of the Mississippi, Missouri, and Ohio basins. The range extends as far north as Canada, as far west as Arizona, and south to the Gulf of Mexico including northeastern Mexico. Flatheads cannot live in full-strength seawater (which is about 35 parts per thousand or about 35 grams of salt per liter of water), but they can survive 10 ppt for a while and thrive up to about 5 ppt.
Feeding
Flatheads prefer live prey. They are voracious carnivores and feed primarily on other fish, insects, annelid worms, and crustaceans.
Breeding
Spawning occurs in late June and early July, and the nests made in areas with submerged logs and other debris. The males, which also build the nests, fiercely and tirelessly defend and fan the clutch. The size of the clutch varies proportionately to the size of the female; an average of 2,640 eggs per kilogram of fish are laid.
The fry frequent shallow areas with rocky and sandy substrates, where they feed on insects and worms such as annelids and polychaetes. Young flatheads are also cannibalistic, which has largely precluded their presence in aquaculture.
Relationship with humans
Inhabiting deep pools, lakes, and large, slow-moving rivers, flathead catfish are popular among anglers; their flesh is widely regarded as the tastiest of the catfishes. Their size also make the flatheads effective subjects of public aquaria.
Sport fishing
Sport fishing for flathead catfish using either rod and reel, limb lines, or bare hands (noodling) can be an exciting pastime. Anglers target this species in a variety of waterways, including small rivers (barely large enough for a canoe), large rivers (such as the Missouri, Mississippi, Ohio, and Colorado Rivers), and reservoirs. A common element of flathead catfish location is submerged wood cover such as logs and rootwads which often collect at bends in rivers. A good flathead spot usually also includes relatively deep water compared to the rest of a particular section of river, a moderate amount of current, and access to plentiful baitfish such as river herring, shad, carp, drum, panfish, or suckers. Anglers targeting large flathead catfish usually use stout tackle such as medium-heavy or heavy action rods from 6â"10Â ft (1.8â"3.0Â m) in length with large line-capacity reels and line ranging from 20â"80 pounds-force (89â"356Â N) test breaking strength. Generally large live baits are preferred such as river herring, shad, sunfish (such as bluegill), suckers, carp, goldfish, drum, and bullheads ranging from 5â"12Â in (13â"30Â cm) in length.
See also
- List of fish common names
References
- Froese, Rainer and Pauly, Daniel, eds. (2011). "Pylodictis olivaris" in FishBase. December 2011 version.
- "Pylodictis olivaris". Integrated Taxonomic Information System. Retrieved 30 January 2006.Â
External links
- Species Profile- Flathead Catfish (Pylodictis olivaris), National Invasive Species Information Center, United States National Agricultural Library. Lists general information and resources for Flathead Catfish.