Redspotted Sunfish
Lepomis miniatus
Redspotted Sunfish (Lepomis miniatus) is a small, colorful sunfish native to the south-central United States. It lives in quiet, warm, vegetated waters and readily feeds on small aquatic invertebrates and insects.

Identification points
- Small sunfish with a reddish to orange spot or flush on the operculum near the ear flap
- Blue-green body with irregular red to orange speckling on the sides and fins
- Short rounded pectoral and a relatively small mouth that does not extend far below the eye
Habitat
Slow-moving or still backwaters, oxbows, bayous, marshes, sloughs, and vegetated creeks with soft bottoms, submerged plants, and cover such as roots, logs, or shoreline vegetation.
Bait notes
Use small live worms, crickets, ants, waxworms, and tiny minnows or insect-pattern jigs. Small poppers, beetle spins, and 1/64–1/32 oz lures can draw strikes from cover.
Behavior
A warmwater ambush feeder that forages in cover and near the surface or midwater for insects, larvae, small crustaceans, and tiny fish. It is most active in warm, calm conditions and nests in shallow colonies during the spawning season.
Caution
No major consumption hazard is specific to this species, but follow local size and possession regulations and avoid harvesting from polluted waters.
Fishing notes
Fish light tackle with small hooks, thin line, and a subtle presentation around weeds, brush, and dock edges. A float keeps bait off the bottom in plant-choked water; move quietly because fish often spook in shallow clear habitat.