Alabama Bass
Micropterus henshalli
Alabama Bass (Micropterus henshalli) is a black bass native to the Mobile River basin and closely related to spotted bass. It favors clear to moderately turbid streams, reservoirs, and tailwaters with rock, wood, and shoreline cover.

Identification points
- Two distinct dark patches: one at the end of the upper jaw and another under the soft dorsal fin, similar to spotted bass
- Tongue usually has a relatively small, narrow tooth patch rather than a broad rough patch
- Body is olive-green to bronze with a light belly and rows of dark lateral blotches, often more elongated than largemouth bass
Habitat
Clear to moderately turbid rivers, reservoirs, and creek arms with rock banks, ledges, submerged timber, docks, and points; often holds near current breaks and deeper cover, especially in impoundments and tailwaters.
Bait notes
Effective baits include small swimbaits, crankbaits, jerkbaits, finesse worms, tubes, jigs, and live minnows where legal. Match lure size to local forage; natural shad, green pumpkin, and craw patterns usually work well.
Behavior
An opportunistic predator that feeds on shad, minnows, crayfish, and aquatic insects. It commonly relates to structure, can school on baitfish, and often suspends or cruises points, humps, and current seams.
Caution
Regulations can be strict because Alabama Bass are often managed as a native or protected black bass where they occur; check local limits and live-release rules before keeping fish. Use caution around sharp dorsal spines and local consumption advisories for any waterbody.
Fishing notes
Fish points, riprap, docks, and channel edges with finesse presentations when pressured, or cover water with moving baits when baitfish are active. In rivers, target eddies, slack-water seams, and current breaks; in reservoirs, work transition areas and brush.