Peacock Bass
Cichla ocellaris
Peacock bass (Cichla ocellaris) is a large, colorful Amazonian cichlid with a predatory streak and a prominent tail ocellus. It thrives in warm lowland waters and is prized as a hard-hitting sport fish where introduced or native.

Identification points
- Large black ocellus ringed with gold on the caudal peduncle
- Three dark vertical bars on the sides, often strongest in juveniles and subadults
- Bright yellow-gold to green body with reddish-orange on the throat and fins
Habitat
Warm, slow to moderate freshwater in flooded forest, lake margins, backwaters, river edges, and around woody cover or submerged structure in the Amazon and Orinoco basins.
Bait notes
Use live shiners, small tilapia, or other local baitfish where legal; effective artificials include jerkbaits, topwater poppers, walk-the-dog lures, swimbaits, and soft plastics worked around cover.
Behavior
A sight-feeding ambush predator that hunts fish and large aquatic insects near cover. Spawns and guards nests aggressively, and adults are especially territorial in shallow littoral zones.
Caution
Sharp gill covers can cut hands; handle carefully. Check local regulations because peacock bass may be native, introduced, or managed differently depending on where you fish.
Fishing notes
Cast tight to structure, retrieve with sharp pauses, and fish topwater at dawn/dusk or over shallow bait activity. Heavy leaders help around timber, and a fast hookset is important with its bony mouth.