Monday, July 18, 2011

Sand Sturgeon

The first time I caught a sand sturgeon in the Wisconsin river I thought I’d caught some kind of prehistoric monster.  It was covered with hard bony plates, had a head shaped like a shovel and a mouth that was under the head and looked like a suction tube. 

Well since then I’ve found that sand sturgeon are not just a strange looking fish, but very tasty too.  There are two sturgeons in the Wisconsin, the sand and the lake sturgeon.  The lake sturgeon is protected and has a very limited season each fall with size limits that make a “keeper” a hard thing to find.  But sand sturgeons are plentiful and you can keep 3 per day. 

How do you tell them apart?  A sand sturgeon is usually between 30 and 36 inches long, and very slim.  They are a brown/tan color and the tail has two lobes, the top lobe being twice as long as the bottom lobe.  Lake sturgeon are much heavier in the body, are a dark green to black color and their tail also has two lobes both of which are the same length. The easiest way to tell is their snout.  A sand sturgeon has a shovel shaped snout and the lake has a blunt snout.

Sturgeons do not have bones and have a primitive backbone called a notochord.  To clean them you cut off the head, then cut into the tail but not too deep.  Then twist and pull and the notochord will pull out of the back like a big rubber band.  Wash the hide and cut them into pieces and boil or broil like lobster.  Serve with melted butter.  They are much better eating than they are looking.

So next time you go fishing in the Wisconsin river and catch a strange looking critter, take it home and have it for supper.  You’ll be pleasantly surprised.

post by: Dan Bomkamp

www.RuralPropertyPro.com  

1 comment:

sports good said...

The easiest way to tell is their tail also has two lobes both of which are the same length..