Archive

Monthly Archives: February 2012

Outside of the sunfishes and the salmonids I haven’t caught multiple species from one family, so I lumped them all together here. Most of these were caught as bycatch while fishing for bass. I have begun to target some of them a little more these days with the fly rod. The picture quality on a couple of these is less than stellar. It is pretty funny looking back at some of these old pictures, I could tell when I got my Pentax Optio, quality improved, it was 2006-2007, sometime when I was living in Alabama.  Also, I haven’t included every different chub or shiner that I’ve caught. There are so many different kinds out there and previously I really didn’t feel it was worth my time to research just what kind of chub or shiner I had caught as bycatch.  I’m working to rectify that, I’ll try and keep tabs on them from here on out.

Amia calva – Bowfin (choupique)

IMG_2555

The bowfin is actually the only surviving member of the family Amiidae.

Cichlasoma cyanoguttatum – Rio Grande cichlid

IMG_7637

The Rio Grande cichlid is the only cichlid species native to the U.S. They’ve been introduced to the City Park lagoons in New Orleans.

Esox americanus vermiculatus – Grass pickerel

This image has an empty alt attribute; its file name is img_8694.jpg

This image has an empty alt attribute; its file name is grasspickerel.png

Esox niger – Chain pickerel

img_8648

The chain pickerel is a member of the family Esocidae, for which Esox is the only living genus. Musky and pike are also Esox.

Ictalurus punctatus – Channel catfish

IMGP7410

The channel catfish is in the Ictaluridae family, they are a family of North American catfishes. There are plenty of ictalurids out there, I just never target them.

Lepisosteus oculatus – Spotted gar

IMG_6473

The spotted gar is in the family Lepisosteidae, which has 7 living species in 2 genera. Gar are another fish I rarely target, though they are everywhere around here.

Lepisosteus osseus – Longnose gar

This image has an empty alt attribute; its file name is img_8350-2.jpg

Cyprinus carpio – Common carp

This image has an empty alt attribute; its file name is img_4709.jpg

This image has an empty alt attribute; its file name is commoncarp.png

Nocomis micropogon – River chub

img_8308

river chub

We catch these in the creek at the cabin, in fact, you will often run into them while fishing for trout in Georgia, they readily take flies. The tubercles on their heads are prominent during the spawn.

Semotilus atromaculatus – Creek chub

Cyprinella venusta – Blacktail shiner

A species of shiner commonly found in our Florida parish streams here in Louisiana.

Luxilus chrysocephalus – Striped shiner

Luxilus coccogenis – Warpaint shiner

Notropis texanus – Weed shiner

Edit Page

The salmonids are in family Salmonidae, which has 10-11 genera that is divided into 3 subfamilies; Coregoninae(whitefish), Thymallinae(grayling), and Salmoninae(char/trout/salmon). Living in the Southeast you have access to a very limited amount of salmonids and I’ve caught the 3 that occur in Georgia.  The brook trout is the only native trout species in Georgia and it is actually a char. 

Updated, December 2025: I made my first trip out West in September of 2012 to Colorado and caught several “greenback” cutthroat trout in Rocky Mountain National Park – or what were considered greenback trout at the time.  Made another trip out West in August of 2013 to Teton and Yellowstone National Parks where I picked up another cutthroat species and mountain whitefish.  In August of 2015 I was able to complete the Wyoming Cutt Slam, picking up Wyoming’s four native cutthroat species (they do have a fifth, the Westslope, that is not required for the slam).  In July of 2017 I completed the Utah cutthroat slam, which didn’t necessarily add any new species to the list, but I was able to add Bonneville cutthroat outside of the Bear River drainage and Bear River cutthroat, which some consider genetically distinct. In June of 2021 I made it out to Arizona and New Mexico to catch Apache and Gila trout in their native range. In August of 2022 I made it up to northern Idaho and caught several Westslope cutthroat in their native range. In July of 2023 I made a northern New Mexico/southern Colorado trip and caught lots of Rio Grande cutthroat in their native range.  Finally, in August of 2025 I made it out to the Olympic peninsula of Washington and caught coastal rainbow trout in their native range, coastal cutthroat, southern Dolly Varden, as well as the genetically distinct Lake Crescent cutthroat trout.

Dr. Robert Behnke is the man when it comes to salmonid knowledge. Pick up his book if you want to learn more about this particular family, “Trout and Salmon of North America”. Another great resource is Gary Marston’s Native Trout Fly Fishing blog, he has a Trout and Salmon species page with pictures and information of all those that he has caught (which may be all that are found in the U.S.). Gary’s trip reports are a good read as well, he has had some epic road trips to catch trout in their native range.

Trout found in the Southeastern United States

Salvelinus fontinalis – Brook trout

IMGP5747

Brook trout are the first native trout species I ever encountered as they do live in Georgia.

Salmo trutta – Brown trout

IMGP5730

Brown trout are not native to North America.

Oncorhynchus mykiss – Rainbow trout

IMGP5637

The first trout species I ever caught, happy to say that I have now caught them in their native range too!

Western Native Trout

Oncorhynchus apache –  Apache trout

Oncorhynchus gilae –  Gila trout

Cutthroat Trout

Western native trout range map source: Coyote Gulch blog

Oncorhynchus clarkii clarkii – Coastal cutthroat trout

According to Wikipedia, the coastal cutthroat trout occurs in four distinct forms. A semi-anadromous or sea-run form is the most well known. Freshwater forms occur in both large and small rivers and streams and lake environments – pictured above is the stream resident freshwater form.  The historic native range of the coastal cutthroat trout extends south from the southern coastline of the Kenai Peninsula in Alaska to the Eel River basin in Northern California.

Oncorhynchus clarkii clarkii crescentii – Coastal cutthroat trout – Lake Crescent form

Oncorhynchus clarki stomias – Greenback cutthroat trout

IMGP7693

At the time this fish was considered a greenback, but it’s more likely that it isn’t after genetic research determined that the true greenback was limited to only one stream, outside of it’s native range, in Colorado.  Work has been done to re-establish populations throughout it’s native range and hopefully I’ll have the opportunity to fish for a true greenback cutt.  Their historic range is pretty much in the state of Colorado on the Front Range, with some watersheds slipping into Wyoming. They are found in the headwaters streams of the South Platte and Arkansas River drainages.

Oncorhynchus clarki pleuriticus – Colorado River cutthroat trout

IMG_2922

Their historic range is headwaters streams in the Green and Colorado Rivers, as far south as the San Juan River, west of the Continental Divide.  They are currently limited to a few small headwater streams of the Green and upper Colorado rivers in Colorado, Utah, and Wyoming, including the Escalante River drainage in southern Utah.

Oncorhynchus clarkii virginalis – Rio Grande cutthroat trout

This image has an empty alt attribute; its file name is img_8375.jpg

Their historic range is headwater streams in the Pecos and Rio Grande watersheds in Colorado and New Mexico.

This image has an empty alt attribute; its file name is riogrande_cutt.png

Oncorhynchus clarkii utah – Bonneville cutthroat trout

IMG_2871

Their historic range is pretty much in the state of Utah, with some watersheds slipping into Wyoming, Idaho, and Nevada.

Oncorhynchus clarkii utah – Bonneville cutthroat trout – Bear River strain

IMG_2727

They are found in the headwaters streams of the Bear River.  No range map was given from NatureServe or the USGS for the Bear River cutthroat trout, but they are native to the Bear River and it’s tributaries, including Bear Lake.

Oncorhynchus clarkii bouvieri – Yellowstone cutthroat trout

IMG_5982

Their historic range is the Yellowstone River drainage in Montana and Wyoming and the Snake River drainage in Wyoming and Idaho.  Their current range overlaps with that of the Finespot in the Snake River drainage above Shoshone Falls.

Oncorhynchus clarkii behnkei – Finespotted Snake River cutthroat trout

IMG_6017

Their historic range overlaps the Yellowstone cutt in the states of Wyoming and Idaho. They are found in the headwaters streams of the Snake River, particularly the South Fork.

Oncorhynchus clarkii lewisi – Westslope cutthroat trout

This image has an empty alt attribute; its file name is img_4158.jpg

According to Wikipedia, Westslope cutthroat trout are native in northern Idaho’s and British Columbia’s upper Columbia River system and northern tributaries of the Snake River. East of the Continental Divide in Alberta and Montana, Westslope cutthroat trout are native to the upper Missouri, Milk and North Saskatchewan rivers. In Montana, the historic range extended east to the mouth of the Judith River and south into the Madison, Gallatin and Jefferson river systems. Isolated populations of Westslope cutthroat trout exist in upper tributaries of the John Day River in the Strawberry Mountains of Oregon and Columbia River tributaries along the eastern side of the Cascade Range in Washington. Isolated populations exist in the Fraser River basin in British Columbia.

This image has an empty alt attribute; its file name is westslope.png

Other Native Salmonids

Salvelinus malma – Southern Dolly Varden

According to Gary Marston, the Southern subspecies of Dolly Varden are native to coastal watersheds from the Susitna River, Alaska south to the Quinault River, Washington.

Prosopium williamsoni – Mountain whitefish

IMG_3009

Thymallus arcticus – Arctic grayling

IMG_3039

I wanted to put together a total list of fish species I’ve caught, just to try and keep a running tab.  Hopefully it will continue to grow as I fish more new waters.  I think I get just as excited catching new species as I do catching truly big fish.  I’m not on any kind of mission to catch a certain number of species, I just think it will be interesting to maintain and revisit the list from time to time.  It should also help to serve as a place to ID a fish that you’ve caught, but have no idea what it is.  Of course, I’m not a biologist, so take what I post with a grain of salt, most of my knowledge comes from experience, and the internet.  In time I will add other freshwater fish from different families, then move on to saltwater, but for now here are the sunfishes.  

Warning to some though, things are about to get nerdy. I’ll separate each species according to it’s taxonomy.  Today I’ll start in freshwater with the sunfishes, family Centrarchidae, which has 8 genera, and 34 species native to North America. So far I’ve caught 21 of them.  It helps to live in the Southeastern U.S. if you want to catch a variety of sunfish.

Where possible I’ll put up a picture and a distribution map of those that I’ve caught. Click the map for more information about that particular species. The distribution maps come from the original NatureServe Explorer or the USGS Nonindigenous Aquatic Species site. Both are pretty good resources for finding information on specific plants and animals.  I did not produce these distribution maps so I can’t confirm their complete accuracy, but I do trust they are mostly accurate.

Update, June 2018: Both of Lance Coley’s articles on black bass species have gone the way of the do-do.  Tim Bonvechio and Patrick Cooney have a pretty good article on black bass up on The Fisheries Blog highlighting the 9 species that the scientific community are in agreement on.  Work is being done to add more and those are mentioned in the article as well, so be sure to check it out. 

Update, April and August 2021: I added a few new-to-me species this year and updated range maps for species that didn’t have one or where the range map info was old and outdated

Ambloplites – Rock Bass

Ambloplites ariommus – Shadow bass

IMGP4880

Ambloplites rupestris – Rock bass

IMGP0816

Centrarchus – Flier

Centrarchus macropterus – Flier

Lepomis – Sunfish

Lepomis auritus – Redbreast sunfish

IMGP0450

Lepomis cyanellus – Green sunfish

IMGP0447

Lepomis humilis – Orangespotted Sunfish

Lepomis gulosis – Warmouth

IMGP5604

Lepomis macrochirus – Bluegill

IMGP6182

Lepomis marginatus – Dollar sunfish

IMG_8956
dollar_sunfish

Lepomis megalotis – Longear sunfish

IMGP4363

Lepomis microlophus – Redear sunfish

IMGP5611

Lepomis miniatus – Redspotted sunfish

IMGP4366

Lepomis punctatus – Spotted sunfish

Micropterus – Black Bass

Redeye Bass

Micropterus cahabae – Cahaba bass (formerly Redeye bass, from the Cahaba River drainage)

20180506_095017

Micropterus chattahoochee – Chattahoochee bass (formerly Redeye bass, from the Chattahoochee River drainage)

IMG_7278

Micropterus coosae – Redeye(Coosa) bass (Redeye bass from the Coosa River drainage)

IMG_5322

Micropterus sp. cf. M. coosae – Bartram’s bass (formerly Redeye bass, from the Savannah River drainage)

IMG_7463

Micropterus sp. cf. M. coosae – Altamaha bass (formerly Redeye bass, from the Altamaha River drainage)

20180920_104839

Micropterus tallapoosae – Tallapoosa bass (formerly Redeye bass, from the Tallapoosa River drainage)

IMG_5262

Micropterus warriorensis – Warrior bass (formerly Redeye bass, from the Black Warrior River drainage)

107-0759_IMG

Smallmouth Bass

Micropterus dolomieu dolomieu – (Northern) Smallmouth bass

107-0740_IMG

Micropterus dolomieu velox – Neosho Smallmouth bass

IMG_0759

Micropterus sp. cf. dolomieu velox – Ouachita Smallmouth bass

IMG_0644

Largemouth Bass

Micropterus salmoides – (Northern) Largemouth bass

img_9937

The Other Black Basses

Micropterus cataractae – Shoal bass

IMG_7497
shoalbass

Micropterus treculii – Guadalupe bass

IMGP8191
guadalupe_bass_range

Micropterus hensalli – Alabama bass (formerly Spotted bass, of the Mobile River drainage)

IMGP3996

Micropterus punctulatus – Spotted bass (Kentucky)

IMGP4903

Micropterus haiaka – Choctaw bass

img_8660
choctaw_bass_map

The newest member of the black bass family as discovered by biologists with the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission.  Their range falls in between the Alabama bass and the Shoal bass in Gulf draining streams on the Florida panhandle and in Alabama.

Pomoxis – Crappie

Pomoxis annularis – White crappie

IMGP3967

Pomoxis nigromaculatus – Black crappie

IMGP5276