Mixed Strain
A mixed-strain channel catfish is a lot or population of Ictalurus punctatus produced from more than one hatchery strain, family line, or source population. Channel catfish are North American ictalurids with smooth scaleless skin, deeply forked tails, and sensory barbels around the mouth; ordinary fish are blue-gray, olive, brown, or nearly black above with a pale underside, while aquaculture and hobby lines may include albino, gold, leucistic, melanistic, mottled, or piebald individuals. Mixed strain is a management label, not a standardized breed name, so appearance and performance can vary.
Fish farms, pond managers, and stocking programs use mixed strains when they want broad genetic background or when broodstock history includes several origins. Buyers should ask what went into the cross, especially if growth rate, fillet yield, disease tolerance, or spawning reliability matter. Care remains normal for channel catfish: warm well-oxygenated water, good feeding response to commercial pellets, attention to carrying capacity, and biosecurity when moving fish between ponds or watersheds.
Colors: Albino, Black, Blue, Brown, Gold, Gray, Green, Leucistic, Melanistic, Mottled, Orange, Piebald, Red, Silver, Spotted, Striped, White, Wild Type, Yellow