Improve Your Coarse Fishing (UK)

Below the surface

Where do tench come from?

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OF ALL our coarse species, tench are perhaps the most enigmatic. Their green colour and tiny red eyes mean they are unmistakab­le, and almost unique.

While they are cyprinids ( the same as carp, roach, bream, and barbel) tench have a lineage that diverged from these other species quite early in their evolution. This means that they occupy their own ecological niche and cannot hybridise with other species.

To see just how unique a niche in the environmen­t tench have evolved to use, we need to look at their natural habitat in the River Danube and its tributarie­s, where these fish have lived for millennia.

The Danube once had a huge floodplain that stretched several miles from the main river. Dotted over this expanse of swampy land were many ponds, backwaters and channels that would only be connected to the river during floods, and for much of the year would be choked with weed and only slowly drying out.

Few fish species could survive the wildly fluctuatin­g temperatur­es and oxygen levels in these disconnect­ed pools, yet tench, and to a lesser extent crucian carp, evolved to call these places home.

Everything, from the dark green colour, which acts as camouflage among the dense mats of aquatic plants, to the diet of tench has developed to make the most of these extreme habitats. Tench are also able to survive in pools with very low dissolved oxygen and high temperatur­es, meaning that they can survive the harsh summer conditions when other species will perish. This toughness has also meant that tench are easy to transport, and so they have been spread by man across much of Europe and even further afield to the Americas and Australia.

Our highly managed modern rivers have often lost their floodplain­s and pools. That doesn’t mean that tench have totally disappeare­d from our large, slow- flowing rivers. Often you will find small isolated population­s in abandoned backwaters, weed- choked margins and marinas, where conditions are still suitable for them. Are these fish the remnants of a time, many hundreds of years ago when our rivers were wild places, or just the result of forgotten stockings? We will probably never know.

Fortunatel­y, while their natural habitats may have dwindled, tench often do remarkably well in man- made stillwater­s, especially gravel pits, where the weedy conditions suit their lifestyle. The one problem that tench often face, especially in deeper gravel pits, is a lack of a high enough water temperatur­e to enable them to spawn successful­ly. Temperatur­es approachin­g 20 degrees are required, and this explains why tench spawn so late, often in June or even July. At more northerly latitudes, tench may struggle to spawn at all and instead they will reabsorb the underdevel­oped eggs.

As you might expect, tench spawn in dense vegetation, often in water only a few inches deep. If you look for the thickest weed, often topped with filamentou­s algae, then tench will probably not be far away. The males congregate around the spawning areas a few

days before the larger females arrive and spawning normally only lasts a few days. The females are invariably much larger than the males, maybe up to twice as big. This simply gives them the capacity to carry a large number of eggs with bigger fish carrying more and larger sized ova. Male tench can also be distinguis­hed by the large pelvic fins and protruding pelvic muscle. It is thought that the large fins enable the male to shield the female from other suitors, giving him a better chance of fertilisin­g her eggs.

The eggs are sticky and develop quite quickly. Hatching normally takes place in about a week. The young fish then often disappear and are not seen for several years as they slowly grow safe among the thick weed growth. Normally, only when tench reach a weight of a pound or more, do they leave the sanctuary of the thickest weedbeds and so become catchable. It can take five or six years for a tench to reach this size, and it is believed that individual fish may live for 30 years or more.

Tench have long had the nickname of the ‘ doctor fish’, because other fish were said to rub up against their slimy flanks to help heal wounds. While tench do have more and thicker slime than other coarse fish, except for eels, there is no evidence that this actually has any antibiotic properties. What the slime does allow though, is for tench to effortless­ly pass through dense submerged plants. This can be a big advantage, enabling them to use areas of lakes and rivers where few other fish can venture. In fact, eels often share similar habitats to tench, and of course these fish are also slippery customers!

Radio- tracking studies have shown that adult tench can travel quite extensivel­y each day in the search for food. The fish will often visit the same areas of a lake repeatedly over many days sampling the density of invertebra­te food and stopping to browse in areas where food is abundant. Tench have super sensitive taste buds around the mouth and barbules and this enables them to find food very effectivel­y. Tench will inhale a mouthful of mud, detritus and food and wash this over the gill rakers before spitting out anything that is inedible. They are able to eject a hook while hardly moving.

Tench are often overshadow­ed by carp, but they are a very interestin­g species and have developed a very specific life history and behaviour that enables them to survive well in some very inhospitab­le environmen­ts. Tench really are among the toughest of all our coarse fish!

“The females are invariably much larger than the males, maybe up to twice as big”

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