Two bass one over 3 lbs and 3 cats and one bowfin. From Wordnik.com. [What is the bigest fish..] Reference
Yes I've caught quite a few bowfin, the largest just over thirteen pounds. From Wordnik.com. [has anyone ever caught a bowfin or a snakehead? if so where and how big?] Reference
Q: has anyone ever caught a bowfin or a snakehead? if so where and how big?. From Wordnik.com. [has anyone ever caught a bowfin or a snakehead? if so where and how big?] Reference
It's common in Florida to catch a bowfin about 10 pounds like Del said. From Wordnik.com. [has anyone ever caught a bowfin or a snakehead? if so where and how big?] Reference
Yes | No | Report from bowhunter352 wrote 47 weeks 17 hours ago holycrap, never heard any of those names except bowfin. From Wordnik.com. [Anyone ever eat Bowfin? Some people call them grendel or shoepic or choupic.] Reference
Yes | No | Report from ryanmiller15 wrote 29 weeks 4 days ago this kinda reminds me of a bowfin because it has the dosil fin like it. From Wordnik.com. [New World-Record Fish from the IGFA] Reference
Yes | No | Report from Northern Coyote wrote 1 year 1 week ago sheepshead, chubs, carp, burbot & bowfin and of course the local favorite, suckers. From Wordnik.com. [Talking Trash] Reference
But talking just freshwater, pound for pound, I accidentally caught a six-pound bowfin on a 6wt a few weeks ago and I was surprised by how game it was. From Wordnik.com. [Bass Have Glass Jaws] Reference
My understanding is that mudfish translated in several dictionaries as “bowfin” are in fact actinopterygian and not sarcopterygian which the eusthenopteron must be. From Wordnik.com. [Newsweek on Tiktaalik and Pandas - The Panda's Thumb] Reference
And that doesn't even factor in the freshwater possibilities of slobbery largemouth bass, peacock bass, bream and bluegill, grass carp, bowfin, gar and all the other weird invasive stuff that eat flies. From Wordnik.com. [Make Your Case: The Best Fly Fishing State in America] Reference
These include ray-finned fish subclass Actinopterygii, "new-finned" fish Neopterygii, Messel garfish Atractosteus strausi, Messel bowfin Cyclurus ( 'Amia') kehreri, Archaic knife-fish Thaumaturus intermedius, Messel eel Anguilla ignota, high-backed predatory Messel perch Amphiperca multiformes, and double-finned Messel perch Palaeoperca proxima. From Wordnik.com. [Messel Pit fossil site, Germany] Reference
The bowfin: an old-fashioned fish with a new-found use. From Wordnik.com. [ArchivesBlogs] Reference
The muskie let go after 20 minutes and the bowfin was boated. From Wordnik.com. [post-gazette.com - News] Reference
Has anyone ever caught a bowfin or a snakehead? if so where and how big?. From Wordnik.com. [has anyone ever caught a bowfin or a snakehead? if so where and how big?] Reference
A bowfin, top, and rock bass caught in the St. Lawrence River near Clayton. From Wordnik.com. [PhysOrg.com - latest science and technology news stories] Reference
It's because it includes one of the more unusual of our native fishes … the bowfin. From Wordnik.com. [ArchivesBlogs] Reference
The thought of people armed with bows, peering into water looking for carp and bowfin seemed a bit bizarre. From Wordnik.com. [News] Reference
Species caught include largemouth bass, shellcrackers and other sunfish, white perch, bowfin, crappie and channel catfish. From Wordnik.com. [News & Observer: Site Info] Reference
After my last visit to the Zoo, I came back to the NCC to see what we had on the bowfin and this is what I found in the catalog. From Wordnik.com. [ArchivesBlogs] Reference
Two panfishermen reeling in a 27-inch bowfin on 6-pound test reported a near 50-inch muskie grabbed the bowfin during the retrieve. From Wordnik.com. [post-gazette.com - News] Reference
I have had luck everywhere in the killbuck so just try it but all i usally catch is bowfin and occasionally some small pike or catfish. From Wordnik.com. [has anyone here fished killbuck creek in ohio????] Reference
The creek can provide fine light-tackle angling for sunfish, bass (largemouth and spotted), catfish, even a few crappie and the occasional surprise bowfin. From Wordnik.com. [chron.com Chronicle] Reference
A Wylie fisherman who caught a snakehead in May 2007 mistook the fish for another species, a bowfin, and released it, although the snapshot he took allowed biologists to identify it later as a snakehead. From Wordnik.com. [TheState.com: The Buzz] Reference
There are short paddles like the one in protected Keeler Bay, off South Hero (where we're told by a fisherman that large primitive bowfin are prevalent) and longer explorations of the southern lake, where intriguing buildings line the shore near Benson Landing (such as a three-story stone house whose front steps rest on a boulder in the water). From Wordnik.com. [RutlandHerald.com] Reference
Food habits of bowfin in the Black and Lumber rivers, North Carolina: final report/Keith W. Ashley, Robert T. Rachels. From Wordnik.com. [ArchivesBlogs] Reference
My favorite was the bowfin!. From Wordnik.com. [New State & Pending World-Record Catches] Reference
The bowfin may not be good to eat. From Wordnik.com. [languagehat.com: HACKMATACK.] Reference
For freshwater, I would vote for a bowfin. From Wordnik.com. [What Fish Pulls the Hardest?] Reference
Haven't heard of the bowfin?. From Wordnik.com. [ArchivesBlogs] Reference
Underneath, we are told, there are lampreys, sturgeon, bowfin, eel, herring, catfish, salmon, trout, bass, sunfish, darter, and drum-mostly fish we've never heard of even. From Wordnik.com. [Guernica Magazine] Reference
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