John 316
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Check out this Walleye
Caught this guy up in Quebec. Several I caught had blue fins, but I was in awe of this one! Anyone eles run into one this blue? [image][/image]
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BIGSLICK
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RE: Check out this Walleye
2010/06/29 08:26:40
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Looks like a blue pike....
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Fisherlady2
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RE: Check out this Walleye
2010/06/29 08:36:03
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beautiful color! Did you ask any of the locals up there if that coloration was common? Maybe someone here a little more educated in icthiology than I can explain why the color variation??
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John 316
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RE: Check out this Walleye
2010/06/29 08:40:07
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I am going to email our outfitter to ask him for sure, but he admitted to me, that he hardly ever fishes. Too busy. As for locals......nonexistant. And if there were, it was way up in French land! You got what you wanted by pointing and pulling out a wad of money.
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Pork
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RE: Check out this Walleye
2010/06/29 08:45:38
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Cool fish John. Catch many like that? Found some interesting info here: http://bluewalleyes.wikidot.com/what-is-a-blue-pike Looks like a color variation in walleye due to the white tips on the fins & tail, or possibly a blue pike / walleye x-breed.? How big were the ones you caught? (blue pike max @ 20") And, hard to tell from this angle, but were the eyes bigger than you'd expect? Again, cool.
"If you ever get hit with a bucket of fish, be sure to close your eyes." ><)))*>
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John 316
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RE: Check out this Walleye
2010/06/29 08:53:30
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Our camp caught hundreds of walleye all week, and this was the only one that was all blue. Length was 18 inches. We caught some walleye with blue fins, but this guy was in a league by himself. I will post pictures of my trip today sometime. Caught a ton of nice walleye, and about 30 pike over 24 inches. Half way through the week, I sacrificed numbers to focus on larger fish.
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Jokerball101
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RE: Check out this Walleye
2010/06/29 10:12:15
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Scientific classification Kingdom: Animalia Phylum: Chordata Class: Actinopterygii Order: Perciformes Family: Percidae Genus: Sander Species: S. vitreus Subspecies: S. v. glaucus Trinomial name Sander vitreus glaucus ( Hubbs, 1926) The blue walleye ( Sander vitreus glaucus), was a subspecies of the walleye that went extinct in the Great Lakes in the 1980s. Until the middle of the 20th century, it was a commercially valuable fish with about a half million tonnes being landed during the period from about 1880 to the late 1950s, when the populations collapsed. The fish was endemic to lakes Erie and Ontario of the Great Lakes region of North America, including the inter-connecting Niagara River, but most especially to Lake Erie where it sometimes represented more than 50% of the commercial catch. The subspecies was apparently extirpated in the Great Lakes by about 1983 through a combination of anthropogenic eutrophication, overfishing and competition with the introduced rainbow smelt, Osmerus mordax. In the Great Lakes, The subspecies is now considered extinct. There are occasional reports of blue walleye being caught from waters in the Great Lakes Basin. This is because many yellow walleye populations also contain a colour variant with a bluish colour. The actual blue walleye, however, was said to be distinguishable from the yellow walleye by various meristics and morphometrics which the blue colour variant of the yellow walleye seems not to share. Reportedly, though, some of the meristic and morphometric differences may simply have been artifacts of the different growth rates of yellow and blue walleyes. The clearest evidence, however, is that the blue walleye, whatever its taxonomic status, has been lost. Nonetheless, an investigation of genetic material from preserved blue walleye specimens is currently underway in several research facilities in an effort to decipher the true status of the populations. To date, none of the bluish-coloured walleyes recently captured has been shown to be a blue walleye, despite the fact that at least one organization in the US is offering a reward for the successful capture of a blue walleye specimen. A United States Fish and Wildlife Service recovery plan in the mid-1970s was unable to find any certain evidence of the blue walleye's existence at that time. Nine purported blue walleyes captured in 1975 [ citation needed] , including a number of gravid females, were inconclusive as to their subspecific designation and failed to produce any viable offspring through artificial propagation. The last known blue walleyes, to any degree of certainty, were captured in about 1983 from both lakes Erie and Ontario[ citation needed] . Subsequent exhaustive efforts to find a relict population have been entirely unsuccessful. The loss of the blue walleye is, arguably, an extinction event on par with the loss of the passenger pigeon and the near-extirpation of the American bison. Where once the subspecies numbered in the millions, all are now gone.
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bulldog1
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RE: Check out this Walleye
2010/06/29 11:30:21
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"and competition with the introduced rainbow smelt" Hmmmmm
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onestring
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RE: Check out this Walleye
2010/06/29 12:11:51
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To date, none of the bluish-coloured walleyes recently captured has been shown to be a blue walleye, despite the fact that at least one organization in the US is offering a reward for the successful capture of a blue walleye specimen u may have thrown back a cash prize
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World Famous
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RE: Check out this Walleye
2010/06/29 12:12:24
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One of the national outdoor mags had an article recently about blue walleyes. The say it is not pigment on almost all of the northern walleyes but a mucus substsnce that actually comes off onto your hands if you handle the fish. The erie blue pike actually had blue pigment. Some fellow had one frozen in his freezer for 40 years and DNA studies show it was a hybrid of a male walleye and a female blue pike.Makes me wonder what else he had in that freezer.....WF
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GilliganJR
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RE: Check out this Walleye
2010/06/29 12:15:48
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It's not a blue walleye. It's a type of "sunblock" for walleyes.
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John 316
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RE: Check out this Walleye
2010/06/29 13:02:26
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One of the national outdoor mags had an article recently about blue walleyes. The say it is not pigment on almost all of the northern walleyes but a mucus substsnce that actually comes off onto your hands if you handle the fish. This did not come by handling. Not that I doubt what it is, but you would have had to take a knife and scrape this off. This guy flopped in my boat, rubbed against my light colored jeans, and left nothing on my skin, clothes or boat. Not trying to say I caught a rare fish, just that it was extremely colorful and worth sharing a picture of.
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indsguiz
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RE: Check out this Walleye
2010/06/29 14:01:13
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You might want to contact some fishery biologists and show them your picture and be prepared to divuldge the EXACT location where you caught the fish. It could mean some real money for you. If those fish could be returned to the great lakes it could become a VERY viable fishery resource. Good luck. OH and nice fish!
Illegitimis Non carborundum
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GilliganJR
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RE: Check out this Walleye
2010/06/29 14:09:07
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They're quite common in northern Quebec. Not going to win some big award for this find.
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MuskyMastr
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RE: Check out this Walleye
2010/06/29 15:47:44
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Better too far back, than too far forward.
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deetz4352
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RE: Check out this Walleye
2010/06/29 16:11:19
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Sure looks like a blue pike? Ive seen a few pics of blues from when my gramps fished for them in the late 40's and early 50's. Thanks for sharing the pic. Cool to say the least. The Deetz
The Deetz Fishermen are born honest,but they get over it
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rippinlip
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RE: Check out this Walleye
2010/06/29 17:52:52
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I caught a few of those at Gouin Resoivor in Quebec. They said they were common there and didn't get real big.. 14 to 16 inchers were the norm...pretty cool lookin
You should have been here yesterday.............. Streams are made for the wise man to contemplate and fools to pass by [Sir Izaak Walton]
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rmcmillen09
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RE: Check out this Walleye
2010/06/30 18:01:58
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About a dozen years back I caught a blue colored walleye late night walleye casting in the west county. Around 19 inches, Didn,t realize how blue it was till I got home that morning . I wonder ?
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GilliganJR
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RE: Check out this Walleye
2010/07/01 09:53:47
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It was blue because it died.
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RhnstnCowboy
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RE: Check out this Walleye
2010/07/01 09:56:52
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He was blue because his wife left him for a largemouth that lives accross the lake and has a bigger dorsal fin.
"Part of being a Leftist is the smug conviction that you and people like you are smart, while everyone else is stupid and/or evil" - T. Fleming
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rmcmillen09
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RE: Check out this Walleye
2010/07/01 12:09:45
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Yep that's exactly what I thought. Makes sense too.
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MuskyMastr
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RE: Check out this Walleye
2010/07/02 02:25:23
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I thought it was blue because it didn't get to spawn.
Better too far back, than too far forward.
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Ernie_420
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RE: Check out this Walleye
2010/07/02 19:54:48
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toad01
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RE: Check out this Walleye
2010/07/02 21:30:33
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not that uncommon its just like black squirrels wich are gray squirrels in a black stage get reports every year like this even caught a few myself in canada and all who check them out say there just regular walleyes even though they look cooler if i ever get one over 27 inchs that color it will be the first fish mount i would get
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DJ2007
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RE: Check out this Walleye
2010/07/03 15:35:26
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ORIGINAL: BIGSLICK Looks like a blue pike.... d show them your picture and be prepared to divuldge the EXACT location where you caught the fish. It could mean some real money for you. If those fish could be returned to the great lakes it could become a VERY viable fishery resource. Good luck. OH and nice fish! Agree, and supposedly extinct, someone might be interested in it!
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Skip16503
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RE: Check out this Walleye
2010/07/03 15:43:39
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ORIGINAL: MuskyMastr I thought it was blue because it didn't get to spawn.  
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D.T.FISH
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RE: Check out this Walleye
2010/07/05 23:50:29
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Got a few in kinzua spillway, pretty common there.
If your gonna mess with the Kings Queens you better watch your Ace Jack! D.T.
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moooooo4me
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RE: Check out this Walleye
2010/07/06 02:25:16
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didnt take the time to see what everyone had to say but what did u catch it on?
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GilliganJR
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RE: Check out this Walleye
2010/07/06 08:53:31
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ORIGINAL: DJ2007 ORIGINAL: BIGSLICK Looks like a blue pike.... d show them your picture and be prepared to divuldge the EXACT location where you caught the fish. It could mean some real money for you. If those fish could be returned to the great lakes it could become a VERY viable fishery resource. Good luck. OH and nice fish! what part of remote northern Quebec did you jackasses not understand? Agree, and supposedly extinct, someone might be interested in it!
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GilliganJR
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RE: Check out this Walleye
2010/07/06 09:06:24
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ORIGINAL: DJ2007 ORIGINAL: BIGSLICK Looks like a blue pike.... d show them your picture and be prepared to divuldge the EXACT location where you caught the fish. It could mean some real money for you. If those fish could be returned to the great lakes it could become a VERY viable fishery resource. Good luck. OH and nice fish! Agree, and supposedly extinct, someone might be interested in it!
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