Although people call them magnolia's, this fish is actually a blacknose. A blacknose has the appearance of a pure black crappie, with the racing stripe. A magnolia is a male blacknose crossed with a female white crappie. They do occur very rare naturally. I have caught two true magnolias in the wild where none were stocked. They have the appearance of a hybrid crappie but with a racing stripe. They are also made in a lab and are triploid, meaning they will not reproduce, but the very rare naturally occuring ones are diploid, and possibly could.
Great video 👍
The second crappie was a beautiful fish
Although people call them magnolia's, this fish is actually a blacknose. A blacknose has the appearance of a pure black crappie, with the racing stripe. A magnolia is a male blacknose crossed with a female white crappie. They do occur very rare naturally. I have caught two true magnolias in the wild where none were stocked. They have the appearance of a hybrid crappie but with a racing stripe. They are also made in a lab and are triploid, meaning they will not reproduce, but the very rare naturally occuring ones are diploid, and possibly could.
I've been watching your channel for a while. What part of the harpeth is this? I'm in Franklin bro