RE: Barometric Conditions
As a general rule, deep water fish with smaller bladders are less affected by low BP conditions. Large bladder fish move deeper seeking higher pressures. During long periods of low pressure, fish compensate and adjust to the lower pressure conditions and will begin to feed again.
During high BP condition, fish seek cover from shallow structure. As the BP pressure begins to drop, the fish will move to sturcture a little deeper. When the BP is rising, fish move out of the deep water and start to feed after a day or so. When the BP begins to drop, especially after a long high BP pressure period, fish feed like crazy. As the BP continues to drop, the fish seek deeper water and do not feed. And when the BP is lowest, fish move to deep structure and do not feed.
As you know, other natural factors like moon phase, water temperature, oxygen levels, wind, boat traffic and food avalibility may enter the equation.
RE: Barometric Conditions
That is good information. I am trying to put all this together and as you say moon phase and all other conditions affect things as well. Wish someone would come up with a nice computer program to figure this out for me..lol
RE: Barometric Conditions
Me too. I forgot to add the affect of the season changes. Somewhere in all of this we should find a good fish day. This fall the water levels have added another factor to all of this.
RE: Barometric Conditions
I would like to add some things which I will para-phrase (rather than quote because it is too long)from SPOONPLUGGING a "GUIDE TO LUNKER CATCHES" by Buck Perry, the father of structure fishing.
BUCK SAYS:
When fishing YOU SHOULD NOT THINK OF WEATHER IN TERMS OF TEMPERATURE OR PRESSURE.—You should VIEW WEATHER IN TERMS OF LIGHT. The lighter or brighter it is, the tougher the fishing will be. The darker the conditions, the better it will be.
(Grumpy’s note: Buck is generally referring to daytime and SUMMER TIME conditions here.)
Using the COLD FRONT as our starting point, lets look at it in terms of LIGHT. The pre-frontal conditions are normally dark conditions, with heavy cloud cover (and a falling barometer), rain or showers. After the front goes through, the cooler mass of air moves in (with rising barometer) and you will normally have a bright clear, blue sky.
PRE-FRONTAL CONDITIONS, WILL GIVE GOOD FISH MOVEMENTS (feeding) AND POST-FRONTAL CONDITIONS WILL GIVE BAD, OR LITTLE MOVEMENT OF FISH (not feeding).
The day following a cold front normally has a clear blue, washed out sky. A beautiful day, and usually windy.. FISH—DEEP AND INACTIVE...
(Grumpy’s note: Buck goes on to list conditions for the next few days after a cold front passes, each day getting clouder and less bright, with increasingly better fishing condtions.)
The day of a cold front—heavy threatening clouds, threatening rain and falling pressure. When the rain starts, the fish will have already moved into the shallow water and will be biting like crazy.
The day after the front passes will dawn BRIGHT AND CLEAR, high pressure will have set in and the fish will have gone deep.
The cycle repeats itself over and over, sometime longer and sometimes shorter, in between fronts but it never stops changing.
(Grumpy's note: I hope this helps.)
Grumpy
RE: Barometric Conditions
You know, Grumpy, I like this explanation. It makes sense to me some how. Maybe it is the simplicity which goes a long way.
RE: Barometric Conditions
okay now explain how moon phases come into affect with these conditions. For instance what about full moon conditions and a falling bp?
RE: Barometric Conditions
WARNING! Long Post coming up! Enter and read at your own Risk! :)
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I love these type of discussions. Remember that fish don't have eyelids that they can close to shut off light. And I don't even think that they have a pupil either. So you might say that I am in the light corner of this discussion.
So light definitely does effect the fish.
A fish's buoyancy bladder is used to keep the fish upright and to maintain buoyancy in whatever depth the fish swims.
Fish live in water and thus are affected by WATER PRESSURE. The swim bladder is effected by WATER PRESSURE.
Cold water makes the air inside a fish get colder. Cold air shrinks in size or in scientific terms make the air molecules VIBRATE LESS. Pressure is the bouncing of the air molecules against the sides of the balloon or the air bladder.
Fish have diurnal cycles. Day and night. Light Conditions changed on a 24 hour cycle with the rising and setting of the sun as the Earth spins around it's axis.
Water is much denser than air. If you were to go from the surface to 33ft down you would experience a pressure change of just 1 ATM or 760 mm Hg. If you were to go from the earth's surface to 50,000ft you would experience a change of one atmosphere as well. One atmosphere of pressure is the sum total of all the air molecules above us when we are at sea level. When you dive to 33 ft you are under 2 atm of pressure. 1 atm from all the air above the surface of the water and one atm from the 33 ft of water column above you for a total of 2 atm. A fish can change depths easily and any air pressure changes above that impact the water pressure on a fish at any depth can be corrected by the fish simply with a depth change. So IMHO the fish change depths due both to the changing light conditions and the changing water pressure. But the changes in the amount of light penetrating the water is much greater than any water pressure changes. It just take too much air pressure change to really effect the water pressure. That's due to the fact that water is so much more dense than air. Air can easily be compressed into a much smaller volume. You just can't do that with water. In fact in Science and in Chemistry we take great precautions when working with air samples. Scientist have to report air sampling values along with the corresponding air temp and pressures. When working with water samples that's not necessary. Air samples taken at 10 deg C would give different results or concentrations if they were taken at 25 deg C. In fact temperature effects the results much more than air pressure. Only if you were to take samples in the high mountains would you have to really take into consideration the difference in the air pressure in the reported results. Pv=nRt
Fish do react to changing conditions. Chances in the angle of the sun to the water's surface is definitely one of those factors. If you fish a lot you know that getting on the water before the sun comes up is important when catching fish especially in the summer months when the sun gets very high in the sky in June or July. Also fishing changes as the sun sets. And night fishing is getting more and more popular. Crappie fishermen put out LIGHTS to fish at night.
I personally think that the entire changing weather conditions effects the fish. I often wonder what the fish would do if they could leave the water during a thunderstorm when there is lighting all around the lake. I know we fishermen head home for cover when there is lightning or we hear a coming thunderstorm. Fish can't leave the water and I think that fish go deeper to avoid the shock from any lightning striking the water. Maybe that is why they seek the shelter of heavy brush when there is a big storm. Or maybe they are seeking protecting from the bright sky the next day after the storm passes.
I would like to see some research notes on how fast a fish can adjust the amount of air inside their swim bladders. I know that a fish's swim bladder just like it's stomach is surrounded by many blood vessels. The blood vessels can pass air molecules in or out of the gas bladder or swim bladder. Just like our lungs can absorb air into our blood stream so can the air be absorbed by the fish's swim bladder into the fish's blood vessels. And gas can pass from the blood vessels into the swim bladder. The fish adjusts the amount of air inside the swim bladder so that it's always balancing the water pressure surrounding the fish when the fish dives or surfaces.
Have you ever seen pictures of a Great White Shark Attacking a seal at the surface of the ocean. Or have you see a large mouth bass hitting a top water lure with ferocity? Where did that bass or shark come from? How deep was that fish coming from? If a Great White is cruising 33 ft below the surface and swims up to grab a seal at speed then that fish is experiencing a change in water pressure of 1 atm or 760 mm Hg in just a few seconds. If a small mouth bass is chasing a bait fish school to the surface from a deep water sanctuary then he too is experiencing a water pressure change as the fish goes from deep water to shallow water. Maybe the fish go from deep to shallow water is short hops with stops in between different depths? Like a scuba diver coming up from a deep water dive and having to stop at various depths to decompress. They may stop at 33ft for 20 minutes and then again at 10ft for another 10 minutes or so. So that any gas that was under pressure and dissolved in their blood can be reabsorbed back out of the blood. You won't want the blood gases to bubble out of solution and form air bubbles inside the blood vessels. That will give you the bends and you will die very quickly from that effect. Fish too can suffer from the Bends if you yank them out of deep water into a very hot day. Not only is the pressure released but the fish is heated up by going from very cold deep water to very hot air. To save the fish you would have to return it back to the cold deep water quickly before it develops the bends.
I have found that fish seem to move more shallow when it's a cloudy day or the winds create waves on the water's surface. The waves prevent the sunlight from penetrating the water as deeply was when the water's dead calm. When it's windy and wavy a lot more of the sun's energy is refracted and reflected back off the water and does not penetrate the water as easily. Fish definitely do use contrasting lighting to help them hide from predators and to also hide from their prey fish. Bass or crappie often can be seen stationed in the shallows under a dock or next to a standing timber waiting for some prey fish to swim by. They use the shady area to conceal themselves much like a LION hides in the weeds.
And many smaller creatures rise up and sink when the sunlight conditions change. Copopods and Rotifers are two that do this. And Algae needs sunlight to live. Submergent weeds don't grow in deep water that has little or no sunlight penetration. Clear water lakes have deeper weed beds than murky lakes.
The sun drives all the life on Earth. The sun also drives Earth's weather. The sun heats the earth and make the air rise creating winds. Differential heating of the Earth creates different temp and pressure zones which creates the winds and the changing pressure conditions.
I don't think that just one factor effect the fish but that the total combination of all the factors works together to make the fish do what they do. It's hard to separate out just one factor that we can key in on. Some use the barometer to help them predict the weather. And then they use the changing weather conditions to try to predict what the fish are going to do.
I have had days when I caught lots of fish on a bright sunny day but those fish were deep fish. Then on cloudy days the fish may be only 10ft deep and suspended. Still other times the fish will be in 7 ft of water. It depends on the clarity of the water and the amount of sunlight hitting the water.
Most fishermen in the past fished the bank. Still today you will see 80% of the fishermen in boats along the banks. The others are out fishing the deep drops and other deep water structure. Point is that fisherman these days are a lot smarter and better educated that in the past. We have better tools these days. Side scanning sonar, gps and other big boys toys to use to help us in our fishing. Topo maps made from sonar/gps surveys and sold commercially have helped the average Joe become a better fishermen.
As Old Buck Perry always said. 90% of the fish are in only 10% of the water. The trick is to find that 10% area. Buck said that if you can find a area that has deep water closely connected to shallow feeding areas then you may have a good spot. I have found that to be true. Fish move around in the lake. They don't stay in one spot all day long.
Ask anyone that has ever scuba dived in a lake with big bass and they will tell you that the big bass are found near structure in the deeper water. I personally have seen big 8lb bass just cruising around the lake bottom all by themselves. The same day I saw a big school of 3lb to 4lb bass swimming around this submerged building in 40ft of crystal clear water. The same day I observed huge sunfish guarding nest on a sloped area in 20ft of water. This same area hold big schools of smaller sunfish that were suspended 20ft down in 40 to 50 ft of clear water. The funny thing was that these fish were relating to an old ice box or refrigerator or some other type of appliance that was sitting on the bottom on this rock quarry. Someone had dumped this appliance off the side of the cliff. The fish were suspended right over the top of this area not too far off the seep cliff walls. Only having about 30 minutes of total bottom time that day I could not stay and observe the fish for long. Everyone should have the experience of diving and watching their favorite fish in their own environment.
Some other things that happen in the water that effect the fish when the sun rises and sets. The amount of chemicals rise and fall as plants perform photosynthesis. The pH of the water around these underwater plants changes as Oxygen and Carbon Dioxide Levels change with changing light conditions
Many small floating algae are effected by changing light conditions. The zoo plankton that feed on the algae changes positions in the water column throughout the day and year based on the light conditions. In fact the base of the food change is effected strongly by the sun's position in the sky. It only follows that the top of the food chain species are as well.
Regards,
Moose1am
My Background is in the Sciences. I have a degree in Environmental Science and have been in the Air Pollution Control Field for over 20 years now. But I have been fishing for over 45 years.
RE: Barometric Conditions
All I know is, when I see a low pressure day coming I hit the lake hard cause those are generally my best days. High pressure (bluebird) days have never been very productive for me.
RE: Barometric Conditions
From your reply to one my post eariler in the year, I thought you must be a scientist in the field of Biology or Zoology. Thanks for a great post and sharing your knowledge. I have a degree in Biology and have worked as an educator in the health feild for 35 years. I also appreciate these discussions because we can always improve our fishing by learning from each other. Don't make fun of me when I misspell a word or don't use the proper grammer from time to time. I seem to be regressing back to my childhood and bad habbits.