Hickory shad range from northern
Florida to the
Gulf of Maine. The largest populations occur in
Chesapeake Bay and coastal
North Carolina. It is a
schooling anadromous species that inhabits marine waters, probably never far from land. Adults enter
estuaries and
freshwater tributaries from the
St. John's River, Florida, to the
Patuxent River, Maryland, to
spawn during the spring. Their oceanic movements are poorly documented. Spawning occurs from December to June, earliest in Florida and later with increasing
latitude. The slightly adhesive and demersal
eggs, about 1 mm in diameter, appear to be dispersed at random over
gravel bars in moderate
current. After water hardening, the eggs become semibuoyant and develop as they drift along the bottom. Fecundity ranges from 43,000 – 475,000 eggs per female, and although the developmental stages of eggs, larvae, and juveniles have been described, little is known concerning the distribution, ecology, and growth rates of these early life stages. Females are larger than males; in Florida, the average female is
fork length and the average male is fork length. Hickory shad are
piscivorous, feeding primarily on small fishes, although
crustaceans and
squid contribute to their diet. One study from Florida showed that their diet on the spawning grounds was almost exclusively fish (97% by weight), but feeding is limited during the freshwater migration and
mesenteric fat reserves developed prior to migration are metabolized en route. ==Relationship with humans==