Illustrations of the White Crappie (left) and Black Crappie (right) |
Development of White Crappie
Drawings
from Tabor (1969), not to scale. Juvenile
is 25.5mm.
|
Crappie
are nest spawners and females are very fecund. Males
begin to defend territories and chase intruders by biting, butting or flaring
opercles. Males sweep sediments out of the nest depression with fin and body
movements; however, the crappie nests are not as well defined as nests built by
sunfish Lepomis species. Larval development is fast. Compared to other centrarchids, crappie have a
longer spawning season, large clutch size, and shorter hatching time and time
to disperse from the brood. They often
nest in colonies and have less specific habitat requirements for nesting. Their strategy works well and, in
small ponds, crappie often overpopulate, leaving the pond owner with “small
crappie syndrome.” Elsewhere, the duration and magnitude of water-level
fluctuations and the development time of early life stages are critical to
determining reproductive success. Recruitment
of crappie is highly variable, even erratic (Mitzner 1991; Guy and Willis 1995;
Allen and Miranda 1998; Clark et al. 2008).
Bad recruitment years lead to bad years of fishing and unsatisfied
crappie anglers. Many states do supplemental
stocking of crappie with variable success, creating many unhappy crappie anglers.
The distribution of the two crappie species violates the notion
that closely related species should not overlap in distribution. The
two sister species show broad overlap throughout the native range. The problem when examining speciation
of these two species is that we don’t know what the distributions were when the
species diverged in the Miocene. The
overlap means that Black and White Crappie produce natural hybrids in the zone
of overlap, in one case as high as 17% (Travnichek et al. 1996; Spier and
Heidinger 2003). This may raise the question ‘how rare does hybridization have
to be to accept these as distinct species?’
Hybridization appears to be higher in zones where the two species are
allopatric. I could find no research
into the olfactory, acoustic, or visual cues that may serve as pre-mating
barriers to hybridization in the two crappie species. There must be species recognition by one or
more senses in breeding individuals for speciation to occur. In the rare cases of hybridization, these
premating barriers must break down. The hybrids are viable and approximately 50%
male; therefore, post-mating isolating mechanisms are not important. Like other hybrid sport fishes, hybrid crappie demonstrate hybrid
vigor and accelerated growth. Naturally produced hybrids in Weiss Reservoir, Alabama,
were less vulnerable to angling even though they grew faster (Travnichek et al.
1997). Most hybrid crappie are sold to the sportfish market for stocking ponds
and small impoundments (Kelly and Baumhoer 2014). Hybrids may not solve the “small crappie
syndrome,” but a sterile triploid crappie might.
White Crappie (top), Hybrid crappie (middle), and Black Crappie (bottom). Photo from Tennessee Wildlife Resources Agency. |
An
orange crappie is a rare find. This is a condition called xanthism or xanthochroism
or xanthochromism. It is a rare condition where all pigments
other than yellow and orange are either absent or minimally expressed. It is
hard to imagine the xanthic crappie pictured below successfully feeding and
avoiding predators to become a full-size adult; however they are rarely
encountered in the wild. The xanthic pigment
anomaly has been observed in other vertebrates as either partial or fully
xanthic.
Xanthic crappie. photo by Donnie Lornson |
Another
variation of the crappie is the “black-striped” variation of the Black
Crappie. This fish has a dark line along
the dorsal margin from its nose to its tail.
This black stripe is a recessive trait and fish culturists quickly learned that
it breeds true. In an attempt to solve “small crappie syndrome” Mississippi Department
of Wildlife, Fish and Park created a triploid Magnolia Crappie. It’s a cross between a white Crappie female
and a black-striped Black Crappie male in which the embryo is pressure treated to
create three sets of chromosomes. The
triploid is sterile and will direct energy to growth instead of reproduction
(Parsons and Meals 1997).
If
you are confused about crappie, don’t feel alone. Just remember
it rhymes with ‘hoppy’ -- unless you’re in the south. No matter where you catch them, eating crappie makes you happy.
References
Allen, M.S., and
L.E. Miranda. 1998. An age-structured
model for erratic crappie fisheries. Ecological Modeling 107:289-303.
Clark, M.E., K.A.
Rose, J. A. Chandler, T.J. Richter, D.J. Orth, and W. VanWinkle. 2008.
Water-level fluctuation effects on centrarchid reproductive success in reservoirs: a modeling analysis. North American Journal of Fisheries
Management 28:1138-1156.
Guy, C.S., and D.W.
Willis. 1995. Population characteristics of black crappie
in South Dakota waters: a case for ecosystem-specific management. North
American Journal of Fisheries Management 15:754-765.
Kelly, A.M. and B.
Baumhoer. 2014. Species profile: hybrid crappie. Southern Regional Aquaculture Center
Publication No. 7212. 5 pp.
Lee, D.S., C.R. Gilbert, C.H. Hocutt, R.E. Jenkins, D.E. McAllister, J.R Stauffer, Jr. 1980. Atlas of North American freshwater fishes. Publication #1980-12 of the North Carolina Biological Survey. 854 pp.
Mitzner, L.
1991. Effect of environmental variablesupon crappie young, year-class strength, and the sport fishery. North
American Journal of Fisheries Management 11:534-542.
Parsons, G.R., and
K. Meals. 1997. Comparison of triploid
hybrid crappie and diploid white crappie in experimental ponds. North
American Journal of Fisheries Management 17:803-806.
Spier, T.W., and
R.C. Heidinger. 2003. Hybridization
between black crappie and white crappie in southern Illinois. Transactions
of the Illinois State Academy of Science 96:119-133.
Tabor, C.A.
1969. The distribution and
identification of larval fishes in the Buncombe Creek arm of Lake Texoma with
observations on spawning habits and relative abundance. Doctoral dissertation, University of
Oklahoma. 120 pp.
Travnichek, V. H.,
M. J. Maceina, S. M. Smith, and R. A. Dunham. 1996. Natural Hybridization Between
Black and White Crappies (Pomoxis) in
10 Alabama Reservoirs. American Midland
Naturalist 135: 310-316.
Travnichek, V. H.,
M. J. Maceina, and R. A. Dunham. 1997.
Angling vulnerability of black crappies, white crappies, and their
naturally produced hybrid in Weiss Reservoir, Alabama Fisheries Research 29:185-191.
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