Tuesday 25 May 2010

Identifying Silver Bream

The silver bream has to be one of the most difficult to identify fish in British waters, not because there is any real possibility of any moderately experienced angler mistaking specimens for 'skimmers', one of the most commonly caught and easily ID'd of all British fish who are nothing more than juvenile bronze bream in their silvery immature plumage, but rather because of the confusion that arises when one is confronted with a water that contains both silver bream and roach x bream hybrids, who really can look confusingly similar.

Luckily, there are a number of subtle but telling differences that once seen for what they are, should clear up any further trouble. These identifying characteristics can be quantified quickly, doing away with all the laborious counting of scales along the entire lateral line (should be between 44-47) which is an awkward thing to attempt to do in the field, and easily appreciated while unhooking the fish.


Roach x Bream hybrid

The eye is where you should look first if you think you might have stumbled across a valuable cache of 'silvers'...

The proportion of the width of the eye to the size of the head in silver bream is slightly more than a quarter of the entire length from tip of snout to tip of gill plate, and cannot ever be very much more or less, whereas the same relative proportions in a roach X bream hybrid's eye are about a fifth. Consequently the silver bream's eye looks very large in its relatively small head whereas the hybrid's eye, and indeed the hybrid's parent's eyes too, appear very much smaller, or more 'normally' proportioned, if you will ~


Silver bream's eye


Roach x bream hybrid's eye

The upshot of this large eye of the silver bream even in grand old specimens over a pound in weight is that they have the appearance of being perpetual youngsters because of our natural tendency to anthropomorphise anything animal with large eyes into a human baby equivalent - they are dead cute, that's what I am saying...

In fact if you catch a silvery fish and your first thought is "ooh, that's really luvly" then investigate further!

The second giveaway is the 'wrist' between the root of the anal fin (with its 23 or so branched rays) and the caudal fin which will be shorter than it ever will be in a roach x bream hybrid because both of the hybrid's parents have scale counts exceeding that of the silver bream's meagre seven or eight along the lateral line between the aforementioned positions - the bronze bream with around 9-11 and the roach with around 13-14 and so, as a consequence, the hybrid of both can never have less than the minumum number for bronze bream or more than the maximum for roach. Any road up, it's always going to be more than it can ever be for a true silver bream.



However, none of the above apply to the extremely difficult job of differentiating between the true silver bream and the roach x silver bream hybrid...! There are supposed to be no recorded instances of such a fish but I am certain that there are some out there to confuse the issue further. In such a fish I would look for a wrist say nine to ten scales long, and an anal fin somewhat shorter than that of the silver bream's and longer than that of the roach - perhaps 15-18 branched rays...


True silver bream

2 comments:

  1. Hi Jeff,
    Fished an over 50's match today at the 'Sedges' fishery, here in Somerset. I caught about 10 or so of the most lovely Silver Bream/roach Bream hybrids, wish I knew the difference! all these fish were caught on small pieces of worm, 'on the drop' up in the water. My skills with a camera are close to non existent and I am not sure I could attach a photo to this post anyway. You really have fired my interest in this lovely fish,
    Best regards,
    Paul.

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  2. Hi Paul, glad that you have the interest in them now! Do you know what, when I first started banging the drum for them three years ago it was as if they didn't exist so far as most anglers were concerned but they are getting more and more publicity what with one thing and another and are finally getting the recognition they deserve.

    I've heard that the Somerset drains have large shoals of them. Another blogger, Russel Hilton, filled me in on that fact.

    They are quite common really, but get dismissed regularly as hybrids. The good news is that a match was won on the Wark's Avon just recently with 20lb of silver bream. Two things are remarkable about that. One it was just 25 fish that made that weight, two the match organisers knew what they actually were!

    You can always send pictures to my mail address if you want confirmation.

    Jeff

    jeffhatt@hotmail.co.uk

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