Redbreast Sunfish
Lepomis auritus
Redbreast Sunfish is a colorful southeastern North American sunfish that favors clear, flowing water. It’s a common panfish and readily takes small natural baits and tiny lures near cover.

Identification points
- Bright red to orange breast and belly on breeding males
- Blue-green cheek bars and wavy turquoise lines on the face
- Long black opercular flap with a pale to white edge
Habitat
Clear creeks, small rivers, and the wooded margins of lakes and ponds, especially around submerged logs, roots, undercut banks, and riffle-run transitions. Often holds in moderate current over sand, gravel, or leaf litter.
Bait notes
Use worms, crickets, small live minnows, waxworms, and ant/bee imitations. Tiny inline spinners, micro jigs, and small poppers can work well in clear water.
Behavior
Feeds on aquatic insects, small crustaceans, worms, and tiny fish. It often strikes boldly in daytime, stays close to cover, and moves into slack water or current seams to ambush drifting prey.
Caution
Spiny dorsal and anal fins can puncture hands; handle carefully. Consumption advisories are usually local and waterbody-specific, so check regional fish advisories before eating.
Fishing notes
Fish light line and small hooks under floats, along shaded banks, root tangles, and current breaks. Short casts and subtle presentations are usually best; a slow retrieve or dead drift often outperforms aggressive retrieves.