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James River Catfishing

By REX SPRINGSTON
TIMES-DISPATCH STAFF WRITER


Giant catfish are taking over the James River.

The creatures, blue catfish, have grown in numbers and size ever since state workers stocked them in the tidal James in the mid-1970s to give anglers a new challenge. "They've gone crazy. . . . They reproduce like mad dogs," said Bob Greenlee, a state Department of Game and Inland Fisheries biologist. The population explosion shows how humans' introduction of a nonnative species -- whether catfish or kudzu -- can have unintended consequences. For example, kudzu, a Japanese vine planted in the South decades ago to control erosion, strangles native plants today.


The blue catfish often weigh 50 to 70 pounds, and some approach 100 pounds. Thirty years ago, a big fish in the James was a 20-pound channel catfish. At some point, the blue catfish population should level off, but no one knows when that will happen. So ubiquitous are the blue catfish now that they constitute up to 75 percent, by weight, of all fish in parts of the James, according to Virginia Commonwealth University scientists.

Whether the result in the case of blue catfish is good or bad is about as murky as the James itself. Greenlee estimates that anglers -- many from out of state -- spend more than $2 million a year on motel rooms, guides and other services in pursuit of the fish. Commercial watermen caught $1 million worth of catfish in Virginia last year, almost all of them believed to be blue catfish.

 


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