Tuesday, 28 May 2019
Characteristics of the Striped Bass
Michael Riglietti is secretary of MSR Electrical Construction in Brooklyn, New York, having worked for several decades in the electrical service and repair industry. When not working, Micheal Riglietti enjoys outdoor recreation, such as spearfishing for striped bass.
Also known as rockfish, striped bass (or morone saxitilis, Latin for “dwelling among rocks”) can grow as long as five feet. They are silvery in color, with olive-green hues on their backs, white bellies, and seven or eight continuous horizontal stripes. They have two fins on the dorsal (upper) side: one soft-rayed and one spiny.
Living up to 30 years or more, striped bass inhabit the coastal Atlantic areas south from Canada to Florida and westward to Louisiana, spending most of their lives in rivers. They also have been stocked in various inland reservoirs.
Their reproductive cycle begins when females deposit eggs in river waters for males to fertilize. (Many are spawned in Chesapeake Bay and the Delaware and Hudson rivers.) The eggs drift downstream and mature in deltas and similar areas. Mature fish enter the Atlantic to migrate.
At one time striped bass were so abundant they were used as fertilizer on farms. However, in 1980 the industry collapsed due to environmental problems and overfishing.
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