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Bield:Fish
Single-region spawn timing

Striped Bass (Inland) spawn timing in Southeast Rivers and Reservoirs.

Morone saxatilisMid-March – Mid-May

Tennessee, Cumberland, and Coosa river systems peak April.

Calendar & temperature

JanJan — Outside spawn windowFebFeb — Outside spawn windowMarMar — Outside spawn windowAprApr — Outside spawn windowMayMay — Outside spawn windowJunJun — Outside spawn windowJulJul — Outside spawn windowAugAug — Outside spawn windowSepSep — Outside spawn windowOctOct — Outside spawn windowNovNov — Outside spawn windowDecDec — Outside spawn window
Typical window: Mid-March – Mid-May
32°37°42°47°52°57°62°67°72°77°82°87°Peak 6267°F
Pre-spawn — best fishingPeak spawn — conservationPost-spawn — recovery feeding·Dashed line = peak spawn boundaries

Phase-by-phase

Pre-Spawn

Trophy fishing window
54–58°F

Inland striped bass move from reservoir main bodies into tributary rivers as temperatures climb through mid-50s. Massive concentrations form at dam tailwaters and major creek mouths.

Tailwater striper runs (Cumberland River below Wolf Creek, Roanoke River, etc.) are iconic spring fishing events — live shad and bucktail jigs produce trophy fish.

Spawn

Conservation window
58–72°F (peak 62–67°F)

Active spawning behavior. Broadcast spawners — eggs require flowing water to remain suspended and oxygenated until hatching. Multiple males pursue each female; eggs scatter downstream.

Inland striped bass populations are entirely supported by stocking in most southern reservoirs because natural reproduction requires specific river systems. Where natural reproduction occurs, conserva

Conservation context

Inland striped bass populations are entirely supported by stocking in most southern reservoirs because natural reproduction requires specific river systems. Where natural reproduction occurs, conservation of spawning habitat is critical. Many southern states impose tailwater C&R during peak spawn weeks.

Post-Spawn

Recovery feeding
72–80°F (~14 days)

Post-spawn stripers gradually return to main reservoir habitat over 2–4 weeks. Females recover while feeding actively on shad.

Mid-summer striper fishing on main lake structure is among the most productive of the year as post-spawn fish feed heavily.

Summer Pattern

Standard patterns
Above 80°F

Fish disperse to summer habitat and feeding patterns. Spawn cycle complete until following year.

Standard summer fishing tactics apply.