agelesssone":bs78y97d said:That is a tilapia, they are in the Cumberland river. We've caught them over 3 lbs.
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RollTide88":bs78y97d said:My dad went fishing with his neighbor yesterday. They ended up reeling this in. What is it? Looks like tilapia to me but they aren't native here, right? Never seen anything like that out of Percy Priest.
Carlos Viagra":3geb961l said:Yes, they've been stocked in lakes around the Crossville area as well. I thought introducing non-native species was an No-no?
The folks here claim they die every winter because the water gets too cold for them. So they say they can't reproduce and become a problem. I believe they are indeed living thru the winters, because if they died off every winter there wouldn't be any of that size.
rukiddin":3rw18t2g said:Carlos Viagra":3rw18t2g said:Yes, they've been stocked in lakes around the Crossville area as well. I thought introducing non-native species was an No-no?
The folks here claim they die every winter because the water gets too cold for them. So they say they can't reproduce and become a problem. I believe they are indeed living thru the winters, because if they died off every winter there wouldn't be any of that size.
Yes, they are stocked in lakes in Crossville.
Yes, they most definitely die out every year in waters without a heat source. They will not survive a water temp <58-60F
Tilapia are extremely fast growing fish. I can stock a 3" tilapia in a pond in late April, early May, and it will be 2lbs+ by September.
They make a great supplemental forage fish for bass and more importantly, they are extremely efficient at eliminating filamentous algae.
rukiddin":8ds0ul67 said:Carlos Viagra":8ds0ul67 said:Yes, they've been stocked in lakes around the Crossville area as well. I thought introducing non-native species was an No-no?
The folks here claim they die every winter because the water gets too cold for them. So they say they can't reproduce and become a problem. I believe they are indeed living thru the winters, because if they died off every winter there wouldn't be any of that size.
Yes, they are stocked in lakes in Crossville.
Yes, they most definitely die out every year in waters without a heat source. They will not survive a water temp <58-60F
Tilapia are extremely fast growing fish. I can stock a 3" tilapia in a pond in late April, early May, and it will be 2lbs+ by September.
They make a great supplemental forage fish for bass and more importantly, they are extremely efficient at eliminating filamentous algae.
rukiddin":3f8ghjmw said:Carlos Viagra":3f8ghjmw said:Yes, they've been stocked in lakes around the Crossville area as well. I thought introducing non-native species was an No-no?
The folks here claim they die every winter because the water gets too cold for them. So they say they can't reproduce and become a problem. I believe they are indeed living thru the winters, because if they died off every winter there wouldn't be any of that size.
Yes, they are stocked in lakes in Crossville.
Yes, they most definitely die out every year in waters without a heat source. They will not survive a water temp <58-60F
Tilapia are extremely fast growing fish. I can stock a 3" tilapia in a pond in late April, early May, and it will be 2lbs+ by September.
They make a great supplemental forage fish for bass and more importantly, they are extremely efficient at eliminating filamentous algae.
FOX FIRE":1bp0fphe said:First time I ate them ot was just filthy tasting, couple years later tried them again, same thing, had to throw them out to the dogs.
RUGER":1msk8mno said:FOX FIRE":1msk8mno said:First time I ate them ot was just filthy tasting, couple years later tried them again, same thing, had to throw them out to the dogs.
Just curious, was this store bought or caught locally?
7mm08":2tnnrutp said:And THAT's why I never eat that species. I'd rather eat a carp! At least they eat American poop and not Chinese poop!!