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#1342447 - 08/12/11 11:15 PM Black Dots on a male Bluegill
Michael-SW CT Offline
Member

Registered: 09/17/01
Posts: 16283
Loc: Bridgeport
While fishing on the Pequonnock River at Bridgeport's Beardsley Park, I caught a male bluegill that had many small black dots all over it.

One thing about the area I caught it in is that the water is contaminated by waterfowl.

Any type of disease on that bluegill?

If bluefish were to grow as big as giant bluefins, then there would be nothing left out there except for blues!

I LOVE MY BLUES!
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#1342451 - 08/12/11 11:35 PM Re: Black Dots on a male Bluegill [Re: Michael-SW CT]
O-BASS Offline

Member

Registered: 06/04/03
Posts: 20124
no contamination. these are a natural parasite that are harmless to the fish called black grubs. they live throughout the skin and flash of the fish, but cause little if any harm that i know of. you can actually eat the fish that have them, as cooking kills the grubs.
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#1342520 - 08/13/11 01:19 PM Re: Black Dots on a male Bluegill [Re: Michael-SW CT]
danny k Offline

The Good Life

Registered: 02/14/03
Posts: 2565
Loc: Port Huron Michigan
Very common parasite. I've caught bass, trout, perch and bluegills as well as chubs with them.

St. Clair River. Port Huron, MI.
#1 Prolific Fishery in North America Bar None!
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#1342616 - 08/14/11 01:03 AM Re: Black Dots on a male Bluegill [Re: Michael-SW CT]
Michael-SW CT Offline
Member

Registered: 09/17/01
Posts: 16283
Loc: Bridgeport
Thanx guys

If bluefish were to grow as big as giant bluefins, then there would be nothing left out there except for blues!

I LOVE MY BLUES!
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#1345026 - 08/22/11 06:34 PM Re: Black Dots on a male Bluegill [Re: Michael-SW CT]
Bill G Offline



Registered: 03/16/05
Posts: 91
Michael,

Whenever you’ve caught a fish that looks as if it had already been sprinkled with freshly ground pepper, you’ve encountered a fish disease commonly called “Black Spot.” The cause is Uvulifer amploplites, a type of worm known as a trematode. While the symptomatic spots look mundane, they represent just one life stage in a very complicated parasitic creature.

Adult trematodes inhabit the digestive tracts of fish-eating birds like herons and kingfishers. They produce eggs that pass into the water as the bird defecates. The eggs hatch, liberating larvae called miracidiae that swim about until they find a snail to act as their next host.

The larvae burrow into the snail and form “mother sporocysts,” which then produce many sporocysts. This life stage then burrows into the snail’s liver, where they remain for about 6 weeks. At that point, a further metamorphosis occurs, as tiny cercariae emerge from the liver and return to the water. Here they swim about until they encounter a fish, which they dig into and form the familiar black cysts in the fish’s skin and flesh.

The life cycle is completed when a bird eats an infected fish, the cysts rupture, and the parasite is freed to mature in the bird’s gut and produce more eggs. Though some consider the spots unappetizing properly cooked fish will not result in a problem for humans.

BillG


Edited by Bill G (08/22/11 06:37 PM)
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#1345170 - 08/23/11 01:23 AM Re: Black Dots on a male Bluegill [Re: Michael-SW CT]
Michael-SW CT Offline
Member

Registered: 09/17/01
Posts: 16283
Loc: Bridgeport
Thank you Bill.

Great blue herrons, black crowned night herrons, and green herrons I see often at upper parts of Beardsley and ospreys I see very often at Bunnells Pond. Very often I'll see snails on rocks near the shore and have found tiny snails in the stomachs of panfish caught there.

If bluefish were to grow as big as giant bluefins, then there would be nothing left out there except for blues!

I LOVE MY BLUES!
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