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  1. #1
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    Is It Time to Rethink Lure Colors?

    Article from Game and Fish

    Now, university researchers in Illinois and New York have found that largemouth bass eyes contain only two different kinds of cone cells: one that is sensitive to green and another that responds to red (“Seeing red: color vision in the largemouth bass,” by L.D. Mitchem, et al.). Thus, bass have dichromatic vision and are responsive to a range of colors that is more limited than the array recognized by humans.

    This research team also performed detailed behavioral analyses to determine how bass respond to different color stimuli, and also how well bass can differentiate between closely related colors. In these experiments, groups of juvenile largemouth were trained to attack a target with a specific color (red, green, white, chartreuse, blue or black) and rewarded with a food item when the correct color target was selected. This work revealed fish trained to attack either red or green exhibited a high degree of color selectivity: Red targets were chosen correctly more than 80 percent of the time, and green targets were chosen correctly almost 75 percent of the time. On the other hand, bass that were trained to attack blue targets would do so 48 percent of the time, but they also attacked black targets nearly 40 percent of the time. Likewise, bass that had been trained to attack white targets would indeed select white 33 percent of the time, but these fish would also select chartreuse 30 percent of the time.



  2. Moderator Mark Perry's Avatar
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    #2
    It ain't broke, I ain't fixing it.

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    #3
    Quote Originally Posted by Mark Perry View Post
    It ain't broke, I ain't fixing it.
    Agreed, this is a perfect example of overthinking it. For me it's keep it simple stupid...K.I.S.S.
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    #4
    Quote Originally Posted by Mark Perry View Post
    It ain't broke, I ain't fixing it.
    Same.

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    #5
    That chartreuse finding is interesting. I had already started believing this myself. I think bass see chartreuse as white and vice versa. They can't tell the difference.

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    #6
    All this info has previously been studied many years ago by Keith Jones, a scientist for Berkley. He wrong a book called Knowing Bass: The Scientific Approach to Catching More Fish.

    Bass see Red and Green. Everything else is grey, dark, or light. They only see the profile other than red or green.

  7. Member basscat21's Avatar
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    #7
    Awe come on.... you need 42 colors of 110s, and have to keep switching to get the right color hue.......
    You also need to count the pepper flakes in your zoom speed craws......too much no good too little and they won't touch it.
    They real issue is power worms red shad, have to pick through them for the right amount of red/black blending.

    And don't forget Fish know what line is....you better hide it......no braid or mono.......


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    #8
    Quote Originally Posted by Mark Perry View Post
    It ain't broke, I ain't fixing it.
    I'm always open to learning something new.

  9. Member juice780's Avatar
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    #9
    Color doesn’t matter nearly as much as people think.

  10. Moderator Mark Perry's Avatar
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    #10
    Quote Originally Posted by bassnpro1 View Post
    I'm always open to learning something new.
    So am I but I've whittled down my color selections to the 3-4 colors that I have confidence in over about 40 years or so. What I like seems to work year round on all types of water for me. Just not gonna scrap that due to one article. I am not trying to diminish color selection to anyone else except myself though. My own on the water personal experience trumps an article but again its simply my own opinion. Other folks may feel differently.


    It's similar to some people referencing line comparisons. I know flouro works best for me on many techniques. I don't have the issues that other people might have with it so I use it. Fishing and what you like to use will always differ people to people.

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    #11
    Color matters more to lure companies.

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    #12
    This makes sense. Most people are only using those basic colors to begin with. Even a lot of the pros talk about only needing black, black/blue, brown, green, and then red or white depending on the conditions for most things. I know I’ve whittled my color selection down to those basics for the most part.
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    #13
    can you say Color C Lector

    it would almost always pick a chartreuse or white ,or it would pick red /green and it always worked

  14. Member sanannbassman's Avatar
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    #14
    That explains why my boat is full of watermelon red soft plastics. That is pretty much all I use with an occasional addition of some Chartreuse and pumpkin.

  15. Member MCPO's Avatar
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    #15
    This is like the "what lure do you catch the most on" conversation. Most people have a favorite color that they use to catch the most fish. But, it's usually because they throw that color more - another confidence factor.
    MCPO

    I never backlash, but each time I go fishing I practice fixing them, just in case I ever do really backlash.

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    #16
    I wonder what difference water clarity made or if it was even considered.

  17. Member basscat21's Avatar
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    #17
    Quote Originally Posted by gambler4 View Post
    can you say Color C Lector
    A Historical piece of Masterful Marketing Genius.....

  18. Member ManxFishing's Avatar
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    #18
    My thought
    If they know every thing about it
    They should enter Tournaments, They will clean up and millionaires!

  19. Member basscat21's Avatar
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    #19
    Wondering what Sam thinks..........

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    #20
    Quote Originally Posted by NCSURodney View Post
    All this info has previously been studied many years ago by Keith Jones, a scientist for Berkley. He wrong a book called Knowing Bass: The Scientific Approach to Catching More Fish.

    Bass see Red and Green. Everything else is grey, dark, or light. They only see the profile other than red or green.
    If you have not read this book, you should do so, very interesting and informative.

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