Bass Fishing Apr - May 2020 | Page 22

COLUMN: CONSERVATION FINDING BASS PART 1: HABITAT QUALITY The first step in locating bass is assessing structure and cover I ABOUT THE AUTHOR TJ Maglio is a tournament angler and outdoor writer based in Minnesota. He has a degree in wildlife ecology from the University of Wisconsin-Madison and has also worked profes- sionally as a wildlife biolo- gist and environmental consultant. 20 n the last column, I dug into high-level popula- tion factors that impact the relative quality of a bass fishery and how to understand why certain lakes and rivers consistently produce more or better bass than others. As insightful as that conver- sation is, not all of us have the flexibility to choose from fish- eries all across the country. Most of us focus on a handful of lakes, rivers or ponds in our immediate vicinity. Step one in catching bass in your local fishing hole is finding the fish, which means thinking less about population dynamics as a whole and focusing more on the various factors that may cause a bass to hang out in an area at a specific moment in time. In other words, by answer- ing the simple question: Where are the bass in this lake today? The three most important factors are 1) habitat, 2) food abundance and availability, and 3) competition. In this col- umn, we’ll focus on habitat. Forage availability and compe- tition will be covered in upcoming issues. Habitat Generalists If you can glean anything from the proliferation of black bass across the country, it’s that they are textbook habitat generalists. From heavily vege- tated cypress swamps in the South, to deep, rocky reservoirs out west, bass can survive and thrive in just about any habitat. But on any given day, where are they? The answer isn’t clear, and it’s certainly not static. You can catch a bass in 30 feet of water on a rock pile, and then ease up shallow and pick one off a FLWFISHING.COM | MAJORLEAGUEFISHING.COM | APRIL-MAY 2020