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Skipjack Tuna - Learn about the habitats, baits and lures that can greatly increase your catches

Learn some tips and tricks about Red Snapper - that will help you catch a lot more of them


Skipjack Tuna are usually mostly dark bluish-silver colored towards the top area of their main body, light bluish-silver colored over the middle area of their body, and from there down they are mostly or silvery-white or bone-white colored, with dark stripes or bands, traveling almost the length of their body. They have small, but pretty sharp teeth, and they can live to be over 6 years of age.

Skipjack Tuna generally travel in schools of their own kind, and they venture from near the oceans surface to deep depths, as they forage for food, and travel about. They tend to shy away from bright sunlight and congregate more near the surface of the water they inhabit during very cloudy days and at night, and they often feed at just before the light of dawn and again just at or after sunset.

Skipjack Tuna are caught mostly by anglers that like catching them for the sportfish they are, they do not grow to be huge when compared to some other tuna species, and their flesh is disliked by a lot of anglers because of it's stronger taste then other tunas, but then again, that varies from person to person.

They are quite the fighters, and when hooked they will give any angler a nice battle when reeling them in. Anglers either fish for Skipjack Tuna by either trolling from a boat or by casting for them, and you can use both methods when using bait and lures.

When fishing for Skipjack Tuna using live bait, some great choices for them seem to be; squid, small eels, shrimp and all sorts of small baitfish like mackerels, sardines, and herrings all work well, and other small baitfish that are found in the waters where Skipjack Tuna feed, will work good also.

You can use dead baitfish that is cut into chunks or strips, but the dead fishbait is not as good for enticing the Skipjack Tuna as the live baits are. When fishing for Skipjack Tuna using lures, the top selections seem to be lures that resemble the baits used to catch them, such as; rubber minnows and larger imitation fish.

There is a website that has great tips and tricks about fishing for Skipjack Tuna and numerous other fish species in detail, this website is called: Fishing Stringer - and it may be found at this url: http://www.fishingstringer.com

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Article Tags: Skipjack Tuna

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR


Robert W. Benjamin has been an avid fishermen for years, he loves going fishing at ponds, lakes, rivers, and many more areas. Robert enjoys catching everything from freshwater fish, such as; crappies and bluegill, to bullheads, catfish, eels, pickerel, walleye and numerous other fish, as well as several saltwater species. If you want to increase your chances of catching more of your favorite fish, visit the website below:

Fishing Stringer
http://www.fishingstringer.com




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