SNOFLO
 

Black Crappie

Crappies are members of the sunfish and the black bass family.



It is an abundant species and is important both commercially and as a sport fish. Black crappies are easily caught, often as fast as the hook can be rebaited. The following are fishing methods used to catch this fish:
Though they show a definite family resemblance, they are distinctive enough that they shouldn’t be confused with any other species. The black crappie and the white crappie are most often confused with each other. Despite their common names, both species are the same color (dark olive or black dorsally with silvery sides) and both have spots on the sides. However, the pattern of the spotting is distinctly different. In the black crappie the spots are more or less irregular and scattered while in the white crappie the spots may be more vague and are clearly arranged into 7-9 vertical bars on the sides. Another distinction; the black crappie has 7-8 dorsal spines while the white crappie has only 6, the same number as in its anal fin. In body shape the black crappie’s is somewhat deeper than the white crappie.


Bait Recommendations

Angling Strategies

Black Crappie Habitats

Wyoming

Colorado

Tennessee

Iowa

Mississippi

Oklahoma

Delaware

Minnesota

Illinois

Nebraska

Arkansas

Indiana

Maryland

Louisiana

Texas

South-Carolina

Arizona

Wisconsin

Michigan

Kansas

Utah

Virginia

California

District-Of-Columbia

Georgia

Florida

North-Carolina

Idaho

Missouri

Ohio

Alabama


Fish Species List

Snow

Snowfall & Snowpack

Flow

Streamflow Monitoring

Rivers

River & Creek Levels

Dams

Reservoir & Dam Storage