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Topic Options
#2244869 - 05/07/08 05:32 PM Carp/buffalo swim bladders
Smile-n-Nod Online   sick
TFF Team Angler

Registered: 07/05/05
Posts: 4450
Loc: TX
I read an article today about largemouth bass having problems with swim bladders when they are caught in deep water and reeled quickly to the surface (their swim bladders expand from the decrease in pressure). Do carp and buffalo have a similar problem?
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"The fishermen will groan and lament, all who cast hooks into the Nile." Isaiah 19:8a

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#2245004 - 05/07/08 06:15 PM Re: Carp/buffalo swim bladders [Re: Smile-n-Nod]
fishlady Online   content
Extreme Angler

Registered: 02/20/06
Posts: 1862
Loc: Athens
Theoretically, it could happen with just about any fish. I haven't seen it with carp or buffs, but I haven't pulled one out of 60 feet of water, either. I think 35 feet is about the deepest I've ever caught one. It seems to me that, since they come up slower, rather than being just pulled up like a bass, carp and buffs may be able to equalize a little better.
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#2245443 - 05/07/08 08:19 PM Re: Carp/buffalo swim bladders [Re: fishlady]
Starless Dragon Moderator Offline
TFF Guru

Registered: 08/06/04
Posts: 13327
Loc: Where the fish are!
Yeah, I think since unlike most Largemouth Bass, Carp and Buffalo actually make you FIGHT them in, stripping a lot of drag and battling you, their swim bladders have a little more time to equalize to the different pressures of various depths.
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#2245711 - 05/08/08 03:25 AM Re: Carp/buffalo swim bladders [Re: Starless Dragon]
Twotoes Offline
Angler

Registered: 04/21/06
Posts: 308
Loc: Euless, Texas
I've caught both carp and buffalo from 60 feet of water at PK and never noticed any problems.
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Past performance is the best predictor of future behavior...

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#2246757 - 05/08/08 09:50 AM Re: Carp/buffalo swim bladders [Re: Starless Dragon]
Smile-n-Nod Online   sick
TFF Team Angler

Registered: 07/05/05
Posts: 4450
Loc: TX
The article I read said that some fish, like trout, have a different physiology that allows them to compensate more quickly for changes in pressure. Maybe carp are like that.

Another article I read said that some fishermen at the Great Lakes catch lake trout from depths of several hundred feet (maybe as deep as 600 ft). Many of the lakers have been caught more than once, so they've evidently done just fine.
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"The fishermen will groan and lament, all who cast hooks into the Nile." Isaiah 19:8a

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