Eastern Blacknose Dace
Rhinichthys atratulus
Eastern Blacknose Dace is a small native North American minnow of clear, cool streams and small rivers. It is common over gravel and sand where it forages on tiny aquatic insects and drift.

Identification points
- Slender dace with a distinctly dark black stripe from snout through eye to the tail base
- Small, blunt snout with a tiny, subterminal mouth
- Olive-brown back and pale sides, often with a faint dusky lateral band
Habitat
Clear, cool, well-oxygenated headwaters, creeks, and small rivers with gravel, sand, cobble, and moderate current; often along riffles, runs, and stream margins near cover.
Bait notes
Usually caught incidentally on tiny hooks with worm bits, maggots, or insect larvae; small nymphs, micro-jigs, and split-shot bait rigs work best. Rarely targeted as a gamefish.
Behavior
Forms loose schools and stays near the bottom, picking insect larvae, small crustaceans, and drifting bits from current seams. It is wary in shallow water and quickly darts into cover when disturbed.
Caution
No major consumption concerns are specific to this small minnow, but it is not generally kept for food; follow local regulations if collecting bait or handling stream fish.
Fishing notes
Fish very light tackle, small hooks, and minimal terminal tackle in riffles or current seams near the bottom. A short cast upstream and dead-drift presentation is most effective.