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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Nov 2006
    Location
    KY
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    What color are the crawdads?

    Understand they may have a range of colors, part of which depends on their environment. So, wondering what color(s) do you find in your creeks, rivers, lakes?

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Mar 2009
    Location
    Coxs Creek,KY
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    9
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    Re: What color are the crawdads?

    Mostly a dark shade of orange with some bluish green on the arms and claws. I catch them out of a creek close to Bardstown

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Dec 1969
    Location
    Frankfort
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    2,056
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    Re: What color are the crawdads?

    The ones I'm seeing in Elkhorn Creek are mostly olive with some blue.

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Oct 2009
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    126
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    Re: What color are the crawdads?

    I saw one in a ditch today and it was solid powder blue color...the same color as this blue here ---> http://www.fishin.com/forums2/images/icons/icon5.gif

    One of the best soft plastics colors i have ever known was the blue and pearl laminate that Culprit Worms produced back in the mid eighties.
    It was the Original Culprit Worm with a transparent blue back with a solid pearl belly. The light would penetrate the transparent blue and hit the solid pearl belly and produce a prism effect that would light up the entire worm. Time Life Books put out a Bass Fishing Book that actually had a picture of this worm and the blue pearl laminate color. So if you ever come across that book you will see exactly what color im talking about.

    Last fall i found out that a green pumpkin and powder blue combo jig skirt and a green pumpkin and rusty red combo jig skirt were killer colors for Barkley and Kentucky. And the peanutbutter and jelly color with added powder blue highlites was good for the small mouth bite on Barkley.
    Last edited by IronWorker; 05-15-2011 at 01:24 AM.

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Mar 2009
    Location
    Brandenburg
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    52
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    Re: What color are the crawdads?

    Most stream dwelling crayfish are blue-gray to olive in color with orange tipped claws. Many of these will be a light pink for a few days after molting. They tend to molt around full moons. Western KY does hold a few species that are blood red. Hope this helps

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Jan 2007
    Location
    St Francis, Kentucky.
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    273
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    Re: What color are the crawdads?

    From my seminar sheets I have taught over the years.

    Colors
    Crawfish coloration is what most anglers are interested in and studying local crawfish is a good idea. There is tremendous color variation from species to species and even within a species. Very little scientific study has been done on crawfish
    coloration. These color variations are not by chance, but determined by their environments. Colors range from brown, tan, green, red, blue, black to sandy yellow and combinations of all these colors. A lot of crawfish in our area are brown or
    tan with orange pinchers.

    Another common color is black with metallic green mixed in, strongly resembling a junebug color. A number of factors influence crawfish coloration. When crawfish move from location to location, they can change their coloration to match their environment. This change doesn't occur almost instantly like in a chameleon, but takes hours and days to weeks. The potential for rapid color change could occur after molting. Dr. B. A. Hazlett of the University of Michigan found that a particular species of crab existed in two color patterns or morphs.
    One morph was reddish-brown and the other green. Individuals were observed to molt from one morph to the other depending on diet. Apparently water chemistry and pH also play a role.
    Crawfish have red and blue photoreceptors, which collect light from different wavelengths. In a Michigan study, Dr. Robert Thacker found that crawfish in water where blue-green wavelengths transmitted best were lighter in color. Crawfish
    in water where red light transmitted best were darker in color. As you can see there are a lot of variables that influence crawfish coloration. The best way to determine the color of your local crawfish is to set out crawfish traps. These are
    inexpensive and readily available. Bait them with carrots, hot
    dogs without red dye, English peas, or pieces of potato. Put
    them out late in the afternoon and check them the next morning.

    What colors imitate crayfish? Crayfish bodies have light-sensitive cells called chromatophores that automatically adjust the mix of colors that the cells "expose" to the outside world, thereby allowing the crayfish to automatically match its color to wherever it spends most of its time. Their PRIMARY colors are shades of black, brown, green, or grey. On their pincers, their backs and lower fringes of the carapace, they have distinctive SECONDARY color accents, various traces such as blue, red, orange, white, yellow, or amber.
    Just like the crayfish automatically matches its colors to its location, you should match your imitation craw colors to whatever color closely approximates the water color, the vegetation color, and the bottom and cover color of the area you are currently fishing. You can even micro-tune into the unique color of a particular weed bed, mud bar or crayfish-infested rock pile. As a rule, think darker - crayfish usually spend most of their time hidden under something or buried into the bottom by day. They usually come out to forage under darkness of night. There are two ways you can accomplish this "darkness" with lures. First, you can use opaque (non-see through) colors that are slightly darker than the water, vegetation, cover and bottom.
    Second, you can use soft plastic colors that are semi-translucent (see through). Just pick a translucent color that matches the water, vegetation, cover, bottom color. As the translucent lure comes in and out of underwater shadows and climbs up or down in depth, the translucence allows it to blend into its background better. For example, when fishing tannin-stained waters or over reddish-brown mud or clay bottoms, you could try a jig 'n pig with an opaque pumpkin-orange skirt and a translucent pumpkin soft plastic trailer.
    Summer Greens and Browns---When the days are at their longest, brown and green lures are at their best for bass. I start relying on darker-colored watermelon pepper/red flake lures in late June, and I phase into lighter-colored translucent pumpkins with gold flake by early July, and continue heavily with green and/or brown colors through August.
    1) Days are longer now. So there is more light, causing underwater critters to lighten up their colorations.
    2) Any lingering effects of spring rains and run-off have ended now, leading to lighter-colored waters with better visibility, therefore less need for dark, contrasting lures.
    3) It's a veritable "green scene" right now with all the aquatic veggies at the peak of bloom. Therefore, most critters that hide in the water weeds should take on a greener hue now than at any other time of the year.

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Apr 2011
    Location
    Elizabethtown, KY
    Posts
    40
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    Thumbs up Re: What color are the crawdads?

    Fishing4kids, Way to go! Excellent information for fisherman and young students.

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Nov 2006
    Location
    KY
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    Re: What color are the crawdads?

    Thanks to all for the responses and especially to Eddie for all the details on coloration. This is just the type of information I was looking for in order to better match my color selections to specific locations. Now, I need to rush out and purchase some fly/lure materials in "selected colors". Also, thinking I might invest in, or fabricate a small crayfish trap. Got a couple of creeks and a local lake I want to zero in on....

    Look out smallies....!

  9. #9
    Join Date
    Jan 2007
    Location
    St Francis, Kentucky.
    Posts
    273
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    Re: What color are the crawdads?

    Quote Originally Posted by Boone View Post
    Thanks to all for the responses and especially to Eddie for all the details on coloration. This is just the type of information I was looking for in order to better match my color selections to specific locations. Now, I need to rush out and purchase some fly/lure materials in "selected colors". Also, thinking I might invest in, or fabricate a small crayfish trap. Got a couple of creeks and a local lake I want to zero in on....

    Look out smallies....!
    Your welcome,
    Some people says I am full of usless info like this. LOL
    Glad I can help.

    Eddie

  10. #10
    Join Date
    Jan 2008
    Location
    BOWLING GREEN, KY
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    Re: What color are the crawdads?

    Funny you should ask this Boone as I was catching crawdads at Trammel Creek yesterday and studying them...the young ones I caught were a more olive color...and the bigger, older ones more grey.

    -Rich

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