absolutely nothing should be eaten that has been frozen for 10 years fish or anything else.
No
A barfish is any of various types of fish, including a yellow bass, a white bass, or black crappie.
Bluegill are in the sunfish family, which is a rather common group of fishes. Some others are: Largemouth bass Smallmouth bass Redear sunfish Black crappie White crappie Warmouth Pumpkinseed Flier Spotted bass Coosa bass Rock bass Roanoke bass Long ear sunfish
I am unsure what constitutes a 'Game Fish' but Crappie and Bass are freshwater fish. Catfish have a large variety and many are saltwater fish. Bass do have some varieties that are saltwater but most do not resemble the small or large mouth varieties that most people associate as 'bass.'
Bass Pro Shops The Next Generation - 2005 Crappie with Bill 1-2 was released on: USA: 20 July 2005
in Ohio we called them papermouth bass in Florida they call them specks Also called strawberry bass, calico bass, and grass bass. also swagle bass
largemounth bass, bluegill small month bass crappie carp catfish
Striped bass, white bass, largemouth and smallmouth bass, bluegill,green sunfish, shellcrackers, pumpkinseed, black crappie, white crappie, carp, bowfin, rainbow, brook, and brown trouts, suckers, smallmouth buffalo, walleye, muskellunge, various catfish species.
Technically, the question you wanted to ask is "can a large mouth bass produce offspring with a crappie?" "Mating" and "reproduction" are not synonymous. For example, a dog will "mate" (i.e, have sex with) with just about any animal that will have him. Similarly, a large mouth bass could technically "mate" (have sex with) a crappie in that the bass could spread his milk (sperm) over crappie eggs. However, only two animals of the same genus will produce offspring when they mate. The large mouth bass's genus and species is Micropterus salmoides. The white crappie is genus and species Pomoxis annularis. The black crappie is genus and species Pomoxis nigromaculatus. There are others, but you get the drift. The two types of fish are completely different genus and species. Thus, the answer to your real question is no, the sperm from the bass would not fertilize the crappies eggs.
Catfish, drum, sucker, carp, sauger, walleye, saugeye, catfish, pike, muskie, largemouth bass, smallmouth bass, bluegill, crappie, white bass, hybrid striped bass, and gar
Probably Crappie, but when cleaning white bass make sure to cut out the red meet. It makes the fish taste real gammy.
Catfish,crappie,bass and carp