Iowa Darter
Etheostoma exile
The Iowa darter is a small, slender North American stream and lake fish in the perch family, often found over sand or fine gravel with aquatic vegetation. It’s colorful in breeding season and usually goes unnoticed because of its tiny size and benthic habits.

Identification points
- Small, slender darter with a narrow head and pointed snout
- Two dorsal fins separated by a gap, typical of darters
- Breeding males show bright blue-green body bars with orange-red fin highlights
Habitat
Clear, cool shallow waters of lakes, ponds, slow streams, and marshy margins with sand, fine gravel, or muck often mixed with submerged vegetation; commonly in north-central freshwater systems.
Bait notes
Not a practical target for most anglers because of its very small size. If caught incidentally, tiny live insect larvae, bits of worm, or micro jigs may take it, but it is usually sampled with nets rather than fished for.
Behavior
A bottom-dwelling insectivore that picks tiny aquatic larvae and other benthic invertebrates from the substrate. It is non-migratory, small, and tends to remain close to cover and vegetation.
Caution
No notable human safety or consumption issues are specific to this species, but its tiny size makes it an impractical food fish and it should be released carefully if caught.
Fishing notes
Best encountered by seining, dip nets, or small-mesh sampling in shallow vegetated margins; standard hook-and-line tackle is generally oversized for this species. Handle gently and return promptly if released.