#239586 - 04/06/04 02:47 AM
what's your diagnosis?
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Ornamental Rice Bowl
Registered: 11/24/03
Posts: 12618
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Smalma, Salmo g, or any other qualified bio types: Click on this link and please tell us what affliction these fish suffer from. GOOFY LOOKING FISH Actually, anyone who knows is welcome to reply. Thanks!
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"Let every angler who loves to fish think what it would mean to him to find the fish were gone." (Zane Grey) "If you don't kill them, they will spawn." (Carcassman) The Keen Eye MDLong Live the Kings!
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#239587 - 04/06/04 04:42 AM
Re: what's your diagnosis?
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Juvenille at Sea
Registered: 12/07/03
Posts: 177
Loc: Shelton Wa.
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Well, I'm no biologist but it has always been my assumption that the fish received some sort of damage to it's nose when it was young. I have caught some planted trout that have had similar noses although not nearly as extreme looking more blunted and not turned down. I have caught them early in the year when their noses were still raw from the rearing pens and then later in the year they seemed to heal like that. I don't know if this is the case but just my observation.
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#239588 - 04/06/04 10:12 AM
Re: what's your diagnosis?
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Three Time Spawner
Registered: 12/29/99
Posts: 1604
Loc: Vancouver, Washington
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If these are hatchery fish, I would say the deformities are a result of a genetic mutation. It's possible they are a result of an injury but not likely. I've seen genetic mutations in young hatchery fish that look very similar. I believe they're hatchery fish because, although genetic mutuations occur in the wild, fish with genetic mutations don't usually survive long enough to reach the adult stage. Unless, of course, the mutation results in increased fitness, thereby passing along the genes for better survival. Genetic selection at it's best. But this ain't one of those benefical mutations..... Which brings up the question, why have these fish survived? It's likely they spent their first year or so in a hatchery. This allows inferior genes to persist when normally they would be eliminated quickly. A classic case of how hatcheries can, under some circumstances, reduce the fitness of wild salmon. BTW - I've seen some very signficant genetic mutations in hatchery fish, including a fish that had two heads on one body. That fish was almost 8 inches long.
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#239589 - 04/06/04 11:26 AM
Re: what's your diagnosis?
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Spawner
Registered: 07/04/99
Posts: 727
Loc: tacomca,wa,pierce
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that same fish or one real close to it was on this broad and some one is using it in thier atviar image. do not rember what the talk was about the possible causes for the defect.
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#239592 - 04/06/04 11:38 AM
Re: what's your diagnosis?
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Dick Nipples
Registered: 03/08/99
Posts: 27838
Loc: Seattle, Washington USA
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FishDoc,
I don't know how easy it will be to find, but there is a thread from a couple of years back that has several pics of fish like that...and a long discussion of what caused it.
I think I remember the consensus being that they probably got that way when they were juveniles in concrete hatchery pens...as all of them were hatchery fish.
If I'm remembering properly...
Fish on...
Todd
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#239593 - 04/06/04 12:38 PM
Re: what's your diagnosis?
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River Nutrients
Registered: 03/08/99
Posts: 6732
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I think it's from people not handling fish properly and lifting them out of the water for a picture.
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"You learn more from losing than you do from winning." Lou Pinella
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#239595 - 04/06/04 01:03 PM
Re: what's your diagnosis?
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The Original Boat Ho
Registered: 02/08/00
Posts: 2917
Loc: Bellevue
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Dam!
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#239596 - 04/06/04 01:24 PM
Re: what's your diagnosis?
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Three Time Spawner
Registered: 09/16/02
Posts: 1501
Loc: seattle wa
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doesnt look like a springer to me.
you know what that fish said when he hit the wall..... "DAM!"
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"time is but the stream I go a-fishing in"- Henry David Thoreau
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#239598 - 04/06/04 03:27 PM
Re: what's your diagnosis?
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The Chosen One
Registered: 02/09/00
Posts: 13942
Loc: Tuleville
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Originally posted by stlhead: I think it's from people (You mean Parker, right?) not handling fish properly and lifting them out of the water for a picture. Oh, I'm sorry about that. I didn't meant to drop them. But they are so slimy and slippery. They are hard to hang on to. I guess I dropped a few.
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#239600 - 04/07/04 12:45 AM
Re: what's your diagnosis?
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River Nutrients
Registered: 03/08/99
Posts: 6732
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It's Ok Parker. As you can see they lived to be caught again.
FUN5...you didn't just bring up boneless browns again did you?
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"You learn more from losing than you do from winning." Lou Pinella
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#239601 - 04/07/04 01:04 AM
Re: what's your diagnosis?
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Fry
Registered: 01/18/04
Posts: 28
Loc: Lakewood
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Dam two headed, two mouthed, albino, concrete slamin fisheys! Sounds likes there on steroids to me. RR
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#239602 - 04/07/04 04:43 AM
Re: what's your diagnosis?
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Alevin
Registered: 03/28/04
Posts: 12
Loc: probably on the river
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Not sure how reliable this is but I was once told by a biologist down in Olympia that this is actually hereditary in some hatchery fish. The reason he gave me was that these fish grow up the first part of their lives feeding on the surface. If you compare a common hatchery and wild fish you may notice a slight difference in the protusion of the lower jaw. This is caused by surface feeding as there mouths adapt to the feeding conditions. Looks like a hooked nosed steelhead.
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#239603 - 04/07/04 11:51 AM
Re: what's your diagnosis?
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Returning Adult
Registered: 10/14/99
Posts: 379
Loc: Orygun
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Originally posted by SlabQuest: A few years back, I caught a coho with two mouths. The mouth that was in the normal location was mutated and fused shut. The fish had been feeding through a second, completely seperate, smaller mouth below the original. Too wierd. I shoulda got a pic... Actually, this "two mouth syndrom" is much more common than one would expect. Every September on the Carbon, hundreds if not thousand of "Two Mouth Kings are dragged up onto the rocks by their "alternate mouth". That's the one just aft of the Anal Fin. Science has yet to explain the phenomena. G
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#239604 - 04/07/04 10:18 PM
Re: what's your diagnosis?
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Returning Adult
Registered: 11/28/01
Posts: 324
Loc: olympia
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problems with the feed or the fish converting feed can also cause deformities.....
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