Everything about The Walleye totally explained
The
Walleye (
Sander vitreus vitreus, formerly
Stizostedion vitreum vitreum) is a freshwater
perciform fish native to most of
Canada and to the northern
United States. It is a
North American close relative of the
European
pikeperch. The walleye is sometimes also called the
yellow walleye to distinguish it from the extinct
blue walleye.
In some parts of its range, the walleye is also known as the walleyed pike, yellow pike or pickerel (esp. in English-speaking Canada), although the fish is related neither to the pikes nor to the
pickerels, both of which are members of the family
Esocidae.
Genetically, walleyes show a fair amount of variation across watersheds. In general, fish within a watershed are quite similar and are genetically distinct from those of nearby watersheds. The species has been
artificially propagated for over a century and has been planted on top of existing populations or introduced into waters naturally devoid of the species, sometimes reducing the overall genetic distinctiveness of populations.
Meaning of the name
The common name, "walleye," comes from the fact that their eyes, like those of cats, reflect light. This is the result of a light-gathering layer in the eyes called the
tapetum lucidum which allows the fish to see well in low-light conditions. In fact, many
anglers look for walleyes at night since this is when most major feeding patterns occur. Their eyes also allow them to see well in turbid waters (stained or rough, breaking waters) which gives them an advantage over their prey. Thus, walleye anglers will commonly look for days and locations where there's a good "walleye chop" (
for example, rough water). This excellent vision also allows the fish to populate the deeper regions in a lake and can often be found in deeper water. Walleye also means that since the live and spawn in mostly in shallow waters, they can see onto or near the shore for disturbances in the water such as humans.
Physical description
Walleyes grow to about 75 cm (30 in) in length, and weigh up to about 7 kg (15 lb). The maximum recorded size for the fish is 107 cm (42 in) in length and 11.3 kg (25 lb) in weight. The growth rate depends partly on where in their range they occur, with southern populations often growing faster and larger. In general, females grow larger than males. Walleyes may live for decades; the maximum recorded age is 29 years. In heavily fished populations, however, few walleye older than 5 or 6 years of age are encountered.
Walleyes are largely olive and gold in colour (hence the French common name:
doré -- golden). The dorsal side of a walleye is olive, grading into a golden hue on the flanks. The olive/gold pattern is broken up by five darker saddles that extend to the upper sides. The colour shades to white on the belly. The mouth of a walleye is large and is armed with many sharp teeth. The first dorsal and anal fins are spinous as is the
operculum. Walleyes are distinguished from their close cousin the
sauger by the white colouration on the lower lobe of the caudal fin which is absent on the sauger. In addition, the two dorsals and the caudal fin of the sauger are marked with distinctive rows of black dots which are absent from or indistinct on the same fins of walleyes.
Reproduction
In most of the species' range, the majority of male walleyes mature at age 3 or 4. Females normally mature about a year later. Adults migrate to tributary streams in late winter or early spring to lay eggs over gravel and rock, although there are open water
reef or shoal spawning strains as well. Some populations are known to spawn on sand or on vegetation. Spawning occurs at water temperatures of 6 to 10° C (43 to 50° F). A large female can lay up to 500,000 eggs and no care is given by the parents to the eggs or fry. The eggs are slightly adhesive and fall into spaces between rocks. The incubation period for the
embryos is temperature-dependent but generally lasts from 12 to 30 days. After hatching, the free-swimming embryo spends about a week absorbing the relatively small amount of
yolk. Once the yolk has been fully absorbed, the young walleye begins to feed on
invertebrates such as
fly larvæ and
zooplankton. After 40 to 60 days,
juvenile walleyes become
piscivorous. Thenceforth, both juvenile and
adult walleyes eat fish almost exclusively, frequently
yellow perch or
ciscoes, moving onto bars and shoals at night to feed. Walleye also feed heavily on crayfish, minnows, leeches, and earthworms.
As food
The walleye is often considered to have the best tasting flesh of any
freshwater fish, and, consequently, is fished
recreationally and
commercially. Because of its nocturnal feeding habits, it's most easily caught at night using live minnows or lures that mimic small fish. Most commercial fisheries for walleye are situated in the Canadian waters of the
Great Lakes, but there are other locations as well.
Fishing
Since walleyes have excellent visual acuity under low illumination levels, they tend to feed more extensively at dawn and dusk, on cloudy or overcast days and under choppy conditions when light penetration into the water column is disrupted. Although anglers interpret this as light avoidance, it's merely an expression of the walleye's competitive advantage over its prey under those conditions. Similarly, in darkly stained or
turbid waters, walleye tend to feed throughout the day.
"Walleye chop" is a term used by walleye
anglers for rough water typically with winds of 5 to 15 mph (7 to 24 km/h), and is one of the indicators for good walleye fishing due to the walleye's increased feeding activity during such conditions.
Because walleyes are popular with anglers,
fishing for walleyes is regulated by most natural resource agencies.
Management may include the use of quotas and length limits to ensure that populations are not
over-exploited.
Seasons
In springtime walleye will take almost any
bait or
lure, but may be more challenging to catch through the summer months. Fall often brings another peak of walleye feeding activity. Walleye are readily caught through the ice in winter, usually on jigs, jigging spoons or minnows.
Bait
Casting or trolling with spinners or minnow-imitating plugs is a good bet. Special worm harness rigs of spinners and beads are often trolled. Jigs, either traditional bucktails, or tipped with any of the modern plastics, a piece of worm or minnow are walleye angling favorites.
Live baits are often still-fished, drifted or trolled on slip-sinker or "bottom-bouncing" rigs. Excellent live bait choices are
nightcrawlers,
minnows, or
leeches, all of which can be deadly on a jig.
When ice fishing walleye are caught jigging or on tip-ups. Tip-ups are generally set up with a dacron backing and a clear synthetic leader. For bait, the most common minnows are Fatheads and shiners. Size for bait is anywhere from 1 to 7 inches.
Minnesota
The walleye is the state fish of
Minnesota. Its popularity with Minnesota residents means that the residents of that state consume more of the fish than in any other jurisdiction.
In 2004, it was revealed that some
restaurants in the
Minneapolis-St. Paul region had been substituting the less expensive, imported
zander for the walleye indicated on the
menu. Zander (pikeperch) is a closely-related species and is almost impossible to tell apart by taste, so the
television station that did the
exposé had to send samples of food for
DNA testing. Though sold as "walleye," several samples were found to be zander, which is considered an illegal practice by the
U.S. Food and Drug Administration.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Walleye'.
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