Acadian Redfish
Sebastes fasciatus
The Acadian redfish, also known as the Atlantic redfish, Acadian rockfish, or Labrador redfish, is a species of marine ray-finned fish belonging to the subfamily Sebastinae, the rockfishes, part of the family Scorpaenidae. It is native to the deep waters of the northwestern Atlantic.

Identification points
- Scientific name: Sebastes fasciatus; family: Unknown family.
- Water type: unknown; native or main range: Global species occurrence records indexed by GBIF..
- Use body shape, color pattern, mouth position, fin shape, and local range together for field identification.
Habitat
Acadian Redfish is associated with marine or coastal habitats within its range, including nearshore, offshore, reef, shelf, or pelagic waters depending on the species.
Bait notes
Common approaches include baitfish, cut bait, squid, jigs, plugs, spoons, soft plastics, trolling lures, or locally proven rigs.
Behavior
Activity often follows bait movement, tide or current edges, water temperature, structure, and seasonal migrations.
Caution
Check official local rules for seasons, size limits, bag limits, protected status, gear restrictions, and consumption advisories.
Fishing notes
Use the Acadian Redfish range, habitat, and local regulations to choose tackle, depth, presentation speed, and harvest decisions.