White Bass
Morone chrysops
White bass (Morone chrysops) is a schooling temperate bass native to central North America, often moving in open water to feed on small baitfish. It is a popular panfish-sized game fish that commonly runs rivers, reservoirs, and lakes during spawning and feeding migrations.

Identification points
- Silver-white body with a faint horizontal stripe broken into short bars
- Two distinct dorsal fins, with the front dorsal spiny
- Deep, laterally compressed body with a strongly forked tail
Habitat
Found in large rivers, reservoirs, and natural lakes with open water, windblown points, current breaks, and shallow rocky or sandy spawning areas. Often feeds near schools of shad and other minnows.
Bait notes
Small jigs, curly-tail grubs, swimbaits, inline spinners, and spoons work well; live minnows are also effective where allowed. Match hatch with small shad- or minnow-colored offerings.
Behavior
A highly mobile, schooling predator that chases baitfish and often feeds aggressively at dawn, dusk, and during wind-driven bait concentrations. In spring it runs into tributaries and shallows to spawn.
Caution
Has sharp gill covers and spines; handle carefully. Generally low mercury compared with larger predators, but follow local consumption advisories and regulations, especially during spawning runs.
Fishing notes
Cast to schooling fish, riprap, points, humps, and current seams; vertical jigging can be effective when fish suspend. Light to medium spinning tackle and a fast retrieve or lift-drop cadence often triggers strikes.