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Thread: Rare Golden Crappie Caught

  1. #1
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    Default Rare Golden Crappie Caught


    This is from the magnoliareporter.com from August 14, 2019:

    David Sisson catches a rare golden crappie on Lake Columbia | Outdoors | magnoliareporter.com [IMG]file:///C:/Users/owner/AppData/Local/Temp/msohtmlclip1/01/clip_image001.png[/IMG]
    Name:  David Sisson Picture.jpg
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    David Sisson and his Lake Columbia golden crappie.

    The sun may have cooked away any rainbows over Lake Columbia on Saturday, July 27, but angler David Allen Sisson certainly found the proverbial pot of gold when he netted a fish few in the fishing world have ever heard of.
    A golden crappie surfaced at the end of his line during one of his frequent trips to the 3,000-acre fishing destination.
    Sisson was vertically jigging a sweat tea and lemon-colored Bobby Garland jig on a chartreuse jighead when the fish took the bait.

    “The jig is the same color as a little bluegill, and that’s what those fish are after down there this time of year,” Sisson said. “I’d caught about three crappie off the pile before that one hit. It hit just like a crappie and pulled just like a crappie, but when it got to the surface, I couldn’t believe my eyes. It was a beautiful fish like nothing I’d seen before.”
    Sisson’s luck continued. As he looked around after the catch, another angler was nearby, so he drove over to him to get a photo while the fish was fresh out of the water.

    “The pictures still don’t do it justice,” Sisson said. “It was amazing, and I just feel blessed to have caught it.”
    Arkansas Game and Fish Commission District Fisheries Supervisor and avid crappie angler Andy Yung also was excited to hear about the catch.
    “I had never seen a golden crappie in my life,” Yung said. “I’ve read about them, but it’s something you just never see in the wild.”
    Yung explains the gold coloration is caused by a genetic mutation called Xanthism, similar to what causes a rare animal to be an albino or the black pigmentation in some extremely rare cases of deer and other animals. Xanthic crappie not only are lottery-drawing rare, but their coloring can hinder their ability to survive. These sorts of animals usually stand out from the others and are typically eaten by predators long before they reach maturity.

    The fish was caught on one of many artificial brush piles sunk by the AGFC in the last few years.
    “Columbia is a water supply reservoir, so we have to be creative when adding fish attractors,” Yung said. “The lower end of the lake really lacks deep cover in the open water, and adding fish attractors in that part of the lake was a major improvement anglers asked for in public meetings when we wrote the fishery management plan. Since that time we have added more than 500 such structures to the lake, and we plan to keep it up.”
    Sisson said he fishes the attractors often and appreciates the efforts of the AGFC to place them in the lake for crappie anglers.
    “They’re marked with GPS coordinates on the AGFC website, so you just have to plug them into your GPS unit and go right to them,” Sisson said.

    Columbia recently was featured for its bass angling in Bassmaster Magazine, ranking in the top 100 bass lakes in the country. Yung and Sisson hope the news of the rare crappie catch also shines a light on the crappie fishing to be had at the lake.
    “I’ve lived in Magnolia since 1985, and have fished the lake since it was first impounded,” Sisson said. “I fish there all the time, and bring my 4-year-old grandson with me when I can. We catch so many fish that I only keep a few each trip and still manage to share crappie with my neighbors and friends.”

    Sisson says his golden catch didn’t end up in a frying pan, but has been taken to a taxidermist in Magnolia to mount.
    “I just hope they can duplicate it,” Sisson said. “They had never seen one in person, so it’s new territory for them. I brought them the pictures of when it was caught, so they could get the colors as accurate as possible.”
    Last edited by Fish on Line; 01-01-2020 at 11:30 AM.
    Likes Brad982, prefers shiners, Tbone LIKED above post

  2. #2
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    My wife Delma found the article and managed to get it all squeezed in --- it said this post was too long --- good Girl !!!!

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    Good read. Thanks Larry and your wife!

    Sent from my LM-X210CM using Crappie.com Fishing mobile app
    Dwyane
    The only place where success comes before work is in the dictionary!

    SMILE- A curve that can set a lot of things straight!
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    Thank you for this report, amazing.

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    Saw that picture the other day too. Pretty cool! It'd have me nervous if I were anywhere around a chemical plant or something. lol

    Did find this though, which is the scientific explanation:
    Xanthochromism (also called xanthochroism or xanthism) is an unusually yellow pigmentation in an animal. It is often associated with the lack of usual red pigmentation and its replacement with yellow. The cause is usually genetic but may also be related to the animal's diet.

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