Northern Pike
Esox lucius
Northern Pike (Esox lucius) is a large ambush predator of cool, vegetated freshwater systems across the Northern Hemisphere. It hides in weeds, reeds, and cover, then strikes fish and other prey with explosive speed.

Identification points
- Long, torpedo-shaped body with a duckbill snout
- Dark body marked with pale oval or bean-shaped spots
- Dorsal and anal fins set far back near the tail
Habitat
Shallow bays, weed beds, reed margins, backwaters, and slow river edges in cool lakes, reservoirs, and rivers; often holds near submerged structure and breaks in vegetation.
Bait notes
Use large spoons, spinnerbaits, jerkbaits, glide baits, swimbaits, and live or dead baitfish where legal. Bright or natural baitfish patterns work well; add wire leader to prevent bite-offs.
Behavior
A solitary ambush feeder that prefers cover and attacks from concealment. It feeds on fish, but also frogs, small mammals, and birds when available; most active in low light and in cool water.
Caution
Use a wire or heavy fluorocarbon leader because of razor-sharp teeth. Large pike can be highly bony; check local consumption advisories for mercury and avoid keeping fish from polluted waters.
Fishing notes
Cast tight to weeds, reed edges, docks, and drop-offs, then work baits with pauses and sudden changes of direction. In cold water, fish slowly; in warm periods, target deeper weed lines or shaded cover.