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#391743 11/05/14 04:34 PM
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I am seeing a few pond stockers selling redhorse shiners. Anyone have experience with this particular species in ponds?


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Red shiners (Cyprinella Lutrensis) are a very adaptive fish in the minnow family, possibly a forage option. They are considered invasive in many areas, but so are almost all pond fish.
Redhorses (Moxostoma genus) are large suckers found in rivers and streams.

Red shiners sound like a very interesting forage option, but it's best if they don't get introduced into new areas.

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Thanks for the clarification on the names. Most sites had them listed as red horse/head shiners. I am definitely talking about the red shiners not the large suckers. I actually have seen these in local creeks with the bright red colors for a few weeks a year.
I know the golden shiners would be the preferred LMB forage dude to size and shape. Thinking in the ways of a bluegill pond or crappie pond, it states this shiner only grows (2"-3") max and seems to have same habits of nesting and appetite as the larger golden shiner. Possible forage fish paired along with slower fatheads?


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They are not adapted to competition with a high end predator like LMB and would not maintain a population in a pond with LMB, much like FHM don't... Red shiners are closely related to spotfin and satinfin shiners, which are better adapted to competition with high end predator fish.

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I agree with you on the LMB smashing them. But in a bluegill or crappie impoundment without LMB presence would red shiners add a forage niche that the FHM could not fill due to speed or habitat they occupy?


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Good question, I'd like to know more about RSH too and their potential role as forage.


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Red shiners would be a very good addition to ponds primarily for yellow perch or forage ponds. Red shiner might be able to survive in a pond with good habitat and walleye or maybe SMB depending on the amount of refuge area of weed beds or extensive dense finely divided structure that imitates weed beds.

Last edited by Bill Cody; 11/06/14 10:59 AM.

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Does anyone know availability of red shiners from hatcheries?


Many men go fishing all of their lives without knowing that it is not fish they are after. ~ Henry David Thoreau

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http://fintexasfishfarm.com/Selection.html

Very last species on their list.

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Dang, number won't work. Nice snag though, Josh. Maybe I can reach them via email.


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I guess I would need to know how much the recommended stocking of a new pond would need to be for RSH. It also says they would prefer cooler water, so possibly a deeper pond would work better. How deep can corkscrew eel grass grow?


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We have Red shiners (Cyprinella Lutrensis) in the streams and rivers in my area (south-central Kansas). I think they would be an interesting forage fish for some PB people to try for several reasons.

First, they will not get too large for your apex predators. The literature says 3-3.5" maximum length. This matches up well with my limited observations.

Second, they are actually an egg-eating species. If you have a pond with overpopulation concerns on one of your species, then there is a possibility that Red shiners could help out by eating eggs in the years that have massive spawns.

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FWIW around here we have Golden Redhorse suckers
(Moxostoma erythrurum). Biggest one I have caught weighed a little over 3 pounds. Typical sucker with tons of tiny bones. I fillet and pickle them. The pickling dissolves all the bones. They are better than any pickled herring I have ever had! smile

Last edited by Bill D.; 12/15/15 10:29 PM.

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I hope to trap Red Shiners this coming spring to see if I can stabilize a population in one of our ponds.


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Are Red Horse shiners and Red Horse suckers the same fish? I recall shooting an occasional Red Horse sucker while spearfishing rough fish scuba diving in Tablerock lake in SW Missouri back when I was a young buck. Wonder if it is the fish you are talking about or something different? Seems like the Redhorse sucker would get up to maybe a foot long at most.


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Not at all Snrub. The Red Shiners I want to obtain rarely get longer than 3-3.5". Some web pages I have searched for then label them as Redhorse Shiners. They are still shiners, not the large golden red suckers. I raise some in a forage pond for bait and possible stocking our farm ponds.


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I've been looking for red shiners for a long time - no luck. I'd love to get some going in a forage pond to provide to others when needed. Let me know how you do, Snakebite - maybe a drive to TN would be in order!


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TJ - You shouldn't have to go clear to TN to find some red shiners. Most central states in the US have them. Study their spawning requirements before actually acquiring some.
See maps
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_shiner
http://nas.er.usgs.gov/queries/factsheet.aspx?SpeciesID=518
See this info from the link where Charles says:
" They are very abundant in this area as I live in central Nebraska, and they are the most common fish in the Platte river."
http://www.fishpondinfo.com/shiner.htm
You may be surprised at what you catch with a minnow seine used in the Platte River and probably all of its good sized tributaries.

You never were successful contacting these people noted above who list them for 0.25 each?
http://www.fintexasfishfarm.com/Pricing.html

Last edited by Bill Cody; 12/16/15 03:07 PM.

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Thanks Bill...maybe I should send Omaha on a Platte River seining run this Winter.

I tried contacting that hatchery multiple times without a response. I'm assuming they are out of business.


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Finfish may be seasonal. I thought I had talked to them earlier this year. Also I've seen these red shiner in certain aquarium shops for sale. Mostly males because of the bright red blue colors.


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TJ - You better go with Omaha to make it a team effort that will result in better success. The red shiners are a schooling species so if you locate them in a stream you should be able to easily get dozens if not a few hundred with multiple seine hauls in various places along the stream course. IMO Your best success will be in the smaller tributaries during spawning season. They will travel upstream to smaller branches of the stream for spawning. In fall, winter and early spring they would be in the deeper pools that would be harder to efficiently seine.

One thing to try is to go the NANFA.org forum and ask what members in your state know where, what streams, or how to get some red shiners. That group is knowledgeable and helpful. One of them may help do some seining.

Last edited by Bill Cody; 12/16/15 08:04 PM.

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Originally Posted By: teehjaeh57
Thanks Bill...maybe I should send Omaha on a Platte River seining run this Winter.


We have a Platte River up here with a State Hatchery on it.

Who would a thunk that two rivers would be named the same.

Must have been a guy named Platte that wandered around a bit claiming rivers wink

The facility is pretty cool tho. I want it!!! Thought about moving up there and getting a job, but that would just be way too cool!

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I think French trappers, who paddled the Missouri and Platte rivers beaver trapping, named the Platte. The French word for flat is "plate", so literal translation is "flat water". Don't quote me on that - but I think it's at least close. The Platte is a shallow, meandering, turbid and sandy river in most of Nebraska and only native Nebraskans typically appreciate it's beauty...I guess the same goes for amber waves of grain.


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Originally Posted By: teehjaeh57
Thanks Bill...maybe I should send Omaha on a Platte River seining run this Winter.


You supply the horse trough and Busch Light and we'll get this done.

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Hell it's 50s for the next week, maybe we should head out and get this thing done.


Many men go fishing all of their lives without knowing that it is not fish they are after. ~ Henry David Thoreau

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