Rejection
Rejection occurs when fish avoid or stop feeding on a bait.
It is often caused by poor digestibility or imbalance in the bait formulation.
What is rejection
Rejection is the process by which fish stop accepting a bait after initial exposure.
It can happen immediately or develop over time as fish learn from their feeding experience.
Poor digestion
Poor digestion is one of the main causes of rejection.
If a bait is difficult to process, fish may experience discomfort or reduced benefit.
Over time, this leads to avoidance and reduced feeding response.
Overloading
Overloading occurs when a bait contains excessive amounts of certain ingredients.
This can include:
• Too many attractors
• Too much oil
• Excessive solubles
• Heavy ingredient combinations
Overloading creates unnatural signals and can reduce bait effectiveness.
How rejection develops
Rejection often develops over time.
Initial stage:
• Fish investigate or sample the bait
Evaluation stage:
• Fish assess nutritional value and digestibility
Learning stage:
• Fish avoid bait if experience is negative
This makes rejection a behavioural response, not just a physical issue.
Effect on bait performance
Rejection severely reduces bait effectiveness.
High rejection:
• Low feeding activity
• Reduced catch rates
• Inconsistent results
Low rejection:
• Stable feeding behaviour
• Consistent results
• Better long-term success
Common causes
Rejection is usually caused by imbalance.
Common causes include:
• Poor digestibility
• Low-quality protein sources
• Overuse of additives
• Lack of nutritional value
• Incorrect ingredient combinations
Preventing rejection
Rejection can be avoided with proper bait design.
Key principles:
• Use high-quality, digestible ingredients
• Avoid overloading the bait
• Balance attraction with nutrition
• Ensure consistent performance
The goal is positive feeding experience.
In Boilie Maker Studio
Rejection risk is evaluated as part of bait quality analysis.
The system analyzes:
• Digestibility
• Nutritional balance
• Ingredient overload
• Interaction between components
This allows identification of potential issues before production.