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Barometric Pressure effects on Grouper and Snapper Fishing

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  • Опубликовано: 10 апр 2023
  • Does the Barometer affect offshore bottom fishing such as Grouper and Snapper? Find out the latest scientific information about how fish adapt to Barometric pressure changes above and below the ocean's surface.

Комментарии • 10

  • @imeyouthem9303
    @imeyouthem9303 Год назад +3

    Thanks for sharing this research and your insights.

  • @Side85Winder
    @Side85Winder 10 месяцев назад +1

    Usally the leadup to a storm so a barometric pressure drop we find best. We prefer a southerly and run out tide for our area which is mostly how the boat sits on the edge drop off. We are catching australian snapper which is very similar to your red snapper.
    There would be a lot of other factors here. You can't fish the storm as its too rough so a unknown how its fishing. The water clarity after the storm is very poor so its juat harder for fish to find your bait. There is a lot of bottom roughed up and water flushing out of the rivers and creeks making the water murky. This murky water is tough as its harder for fish to find your bait. I am not even fishing deep water so i dont think its that bigger of a deal.
    Its more the edge and drop off shape of the bottom for the given direction flow of water and wind tonassist to fish that structure. So say a structure that rises up and its a nice big ridge going north to south. The tide/ current on that ridge is flowing in most cases east to west. Now i think the fish will sit on the front side east where there is more pressure than the rear west side and to drift into that you would want a easterly. The theroy here goes that any food incomming to that fish will flow into the east side of the ridge so the fish will sit on that edge and ambush. When the tide is falling you may find the fish on the oppsite side of the ridge as its the new front pressure edge. Now being the oppsite side you would want a oppsite wind to drift into that front of the ledge unless you can anchor.

    • @bottomfishing24-7
      @bottomfishing24-7  9 месяцев назад

      Awesome! Good info

    • @Side85Winder
      @Side85Winder 9 месяцев назад +1

      @bottomfishing24-7 other day I fished my spot wind against tide which usally is terrible. It was a north easterly wind with a run out tide (water flow west to east due to the bay shape). We had to fish around the anchor line which we hooked one of the rods onto. The barometric pressure was dropping due to the storm the day after. Caught a fair few fish considering we hate easterly winds.
      I would say the ledge shape, bottom type and tide direction is the biggest factor. Our bottom every now and then we hook up the bottom and get sea squirter, mollusc shell life, ribbon weed in large clumps. It's all on a drop off from about 5m to 13m deep (the channel cut for ships it was dredged 50+ years ago).

    • @bottomfishing24-7
      @bottomfishing24-7  9 месяцев назад

      @@Side85Winder awesome info!

  • @ncsojourner200
    @ncsojourner200 Год назад +1

    Alot of words time for little info, i stopped after 5mins...
    My personal biologist perspective.
    Water clarity, turbidity, algae blooms, etc.. plays more of a role than pressure... clear, clean = they roam (lg bite circle)
    Dirty = tight to structure (sm bite circle)
    Predator/ prey response has more impact than pressure...
    Larger the swim bladder in a fish = the more their affected, high pressure is equivalent to a "head ache"

    • @bottomfishing24-7
      @bottomfishing24-7  Год назад

      Thank you for your input. Sorry it was a waste of time for you. But, it is factual. Please post your podcast/video on the subject, I'll be happy to watch it and share it.. Carry on!

    • @ncsojourner200
      @ncsojourner200 Год назад

      No vids, mine is real world " factual "..
      Just saying, condense to capture your audience. 40yrs experience.
      Blessings

  • @ninokercado9921
    @ninokercado9921 4 месяца назад

    Bla bla bla