Marbled Swamp Eel
Synbranchus marmoratus
Marbled Swamp Eel (Synbranchus marmoratus) is a mostly nocturnal, elongate freshwater fish that lives buried in mud or hidden in vegetated backwaters. It is air-breathing, hardy in low-oxygen water, and can survive short overland movements in wet conditions.

Identification points
- Long, cylindrical, eel-like body with no paired fins
- Marbled brown-and-olive blotches over a pale to dark body
- Small head with reduced pectoral/ pelvic fins and a narrow gill opening
Habitat
Shallow freshwater wetlands, marshes, flooded grasslands, sluggish creeks, ditches, and muddy backwaters with dense vegetation and soft bottoms; often in stagnant or hypoxic water.
Bait notes
Use earthworms, small fish strips, shrimp, or cut bait near the bottom; small live minnows can work where legal. It is not a common sport target in most areas, so incidental capture is more likely than targeted fishing.
Behavior
Nocturnal ambush predator that feeds on worms, insects, crustaceans, small fish, and other aquatic animals. Spends much of the day buried in mud or concealed in cover and can tolerate very poor water quality.
Caution
Can wriggle aggressively and is difficult to handle; use care to avoid hook punctures and escape in mud or vegetation. Check local rules and invasive-species regulations, as swamp eels are prohibited or restricted in some regions.
Fishing notes
Fish slow on the bottom with small hooks and minimal terminal tackle around muddy margins, weed edges, and holes in still water. Best at dusk or at night; keep bait in place and be prepared for strong, twisting runs once hooked.