« Fish Identification
Flathead Catfish

Scientific name:

Pylodictus Olivaris

Identification:

To tell a channel catfish from the flathead, look at the lower jaw andthe tail. The flathead has a slightly protruding lower jaw, like an underbite.And its tail is square, where the channel's is forked.

Distribution:

Color variable with size and habitat. Dorsal region of head, back, and sides light brown to yellow, mottled with dark brown or black (mottling tending to disappear in adults from turbid water); ventral re- gion of head and belly yellowish to cream colored. Caudal fin darkly pigmented, except upper lobe, which has a distinct white patch along dorsal border (white patch disappears with age); other fins pig- mented like adjacent parts of body. All barbels slightly to darkly pigmented. Young more contrastingly col- ored than adults.

Spawning:

Flatheads catfish first spawn at about 4-5 years old. They spawn in June and July, when water temperatures reach 72-75° F. They dig out a large hole under a bank or log or dig down through silt and mud until they reach gravel. They spawn in the nest with the female laying eggs in bunches of 30 to 50. A single female can lay 3,000-30,000 eggs depending on her size. When the female is done, she leaves the nest. The male fans the eggs with his fins. After they hatch, he protects the young until they can feed on their own.

Angling: