
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Continuing our mini-series on prey, Episode 19 leaps into the high-protein world of the frog. While every angler loves a topwater explosion, there is a complex biological reason why a largemouth bass is willing to exert so much energy to track and ambush these amphibians. We’ll break down the specific nutritional profile that makes frogs a "premium" meal and explore the sensory triggers that provoke a bass into an instinctive, violent strike. We go beyond the basics by examining the seasonal migrations and lifecycles of common species such as the bullfrog, leopard frog, and green frog, revealing why they become high-vulnerability targets at specific times of year. If you are a serious largemouth bass angler, you know that understanding the prey is understanding the predator.
By Science of the Strike, LLCContinuing our mini-series on prey, Episode 19 leaps into the high-protein world of the frog. While every angler loves a topwater explosion, there is a complex biological reason why a largemouth bass is willing to exert so much energy to track and ambush these amphibians. We’ll break down the specific nutritional profile that makes frogs a "premium" meal and explore the sensory triggers that provoke a bass into an instinctive, violent strike. We go beyond the basics by examining the seasonal migrations and lifecycles of common species such as the bullfrog, leopard frog, and green frog, revealing why they become high-vulnerability targets at specific times of year. If you are a serious largemouth bass angler, you know that understanding the prey is understanding the predator.