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from Shallow Water Angler

The Grassflat Food Chain
The gamefish, the prey, and tips for choosing lures and flies.

Angler hooks a redfish on a plug that imitated the finger mullet found over this flat.

Having covered seagrass communities in the April/May issue, let's get to the "meat" of the subject for anglers--the fish food that lives there.

Seagrass beds support an incredible diversity of fish, crabs, shrimp, isopods (think potato bugs), amphipods (miniature shrimp-like creatures), various worms, algae, echinoderms (urchins and sea stars), and a host of other goodies. Most of the creatures on this grassflat buffet line can't be imitated with the lures or flies we fish, but they are all important prey items for juvenile or adult gamefish and the baitfish that they prey on.

Crabs and Shrimp


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Blue crabs are a common grassflats crab. They can be fished live or imitated with jigs and soft plastics.

Small swimming crabs (family Portunidae) and walking crabs are the most common seagrass crabs. These crabs are either well-camouflaged for green turtlegrass or bare bottom, or wherever coral, rubble, shells or rocks are mixed with the seagrass. Walking crabs scurry for cover or burrow when approached by a fish. Swimming crabs are voracious predators that are more mobile, make a dash (swimming sideways) but ultimately burrow or hide under shells or rocks. Without a chance to cover up, this crab will slash at a fish with its claws.

In the tropics, reef crabs (members of the spider crab family Majidae) are the most common. In subtropical and warm temperate areas, mud crabs (family Xanthidae) inhabit seagrass beds year-round, and are primarily bottom-huggers. They, too, scurry for the underside of these shelters when chased. Mud crabs feed and hide at the base of grass blades and burrow into the soft bottom when threatened. In the subtropics clumps of drift algae appear in winter, and provide mud crabs additional refuge.

Though fly fishers have more flexibility when it comes to imitating crabs (and there are many innovative sinking and surface-swimming crab patterns these days) light-tackle anglers can do a good job duping the "crab-eaters" by fishing tan, brown or olive-colored skimmer jigs, or some of the lifelike plastic or scented, soft crabs. When tarpon, stripers and permit are popping swimming crabs at the surface--with grass-choked tide lines a prime example--it's best to cast un-weighted plastic crabs, or crab flies made of buoyant materials such as deerhair. But for the most part, the best flats crab imitations (jigs or flies) should sink to the bottom quickly because crabs burrow in defense. In fact, the best crab flies are weighted with lead so that they sink at a slight angle.

Shrimp quickly take on the coloration of their surroundings. Four families of shrimp--common, mantis, snapping and grass--are typical seagrass inhabitants. Common shrimp (family Peneidae), inhabit seagrass beds as juveniles and migrate to deeper water as adults. Usually found in seagrass over soft bottom, they are either tan or green depending on the color of that bottom. An array of lures and flies are effective shrimp imitators--small skimmer jigs, and of course, the many plastic shrimp on the market. They come in many colors so that you can match the bottom as the real critter does. Some plastic shrimp are designed as "forward swimmers" while others retreat like a threatened shrimp on the retrieve. The list of shrimp fly patterns, for bonefish, reds, tarpon, trout, stripers and more, grows every year.

No, that’s no praying mantis. Mantis shrimp live among coral, rubble, and hole-up on flats with mixed bottom. It’s primary forage for bonefish, permit, redfish and others.

Mantis shrimp (family Squillidae) live in grassflat holes, or among coral rubble or shells. They are similar in appearance to the praying mantis insect. Those living among sparse seagrass with coral rubble or open sand bottom are tan; those in dense seagrass are green. There are dedicated mantis shrimp fly patterns now that appeal to both large bonefish, redfish and permit.


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