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Bullhead Minnow

Pimephales vigilax

Bullhead minnow (*Pimephales vigilax*) is a small, hardy cyprinid of warm, often turbid waters. It commonly lives in quiet backwaters and shallow margins where it forages close to the bottom on tiny invertebrates and algae.

Freshwater
Bullhead Minnow reference image
AVNJ, cc-by, via Wikimedia Commons. Source: Wikimedia Commons.

Identification points

  • Small cyprinid with a blunt head and terminal mouth
  • Dark lateral stripe along a slender, cylindrical body
  • Dorsal fin origin set slightly behind the pelvic fins

Habitat

Warm, shallow, low-gradient streams, ponds, and backwaters with mud, sand, or fine gravel bottoms; often in sluggish or still water with moderate turbidity and aquatic vegetation.

Bait notes

Rarely targeted as a sport fish. If used as live bait where legal, small worms, insect larvae, or tiny pieces of dough bait are taken; very small plain jigs and micro-spinners can also catch it.

Behavior

Forms small schools and stays near the bottom or shoreline cover. It feeds opportunistically on benthic algae, detritus, small crustaceans, insect larvae, and other tiny invertebrates.

Caution

Check local rules before collecting or using as bait; regulations on baitfish harvest and transport can be strict. No major human-consumption issue is well established for this species, but it is too small to be a table fish.

Fishing notes

Fish light tackle near shallow margins, backwaters, and slack seams with tiny hooks and minimal weight. Slow presentations close to bottom are most effective; it is more often caught incidentally than intentionally.