Atlantic Crevalle Jack
Caranx hippos
Atlantic crevalle jack is a fast, powerful coastal jack found in warm Atlantic waters, often schooling near reefs, passes, surf zones, and estuaries. It is an aggressive predator that feeds on baitfish, crustaceans, and cephalopods, and is valued more for sport than table fare.

Identification points
- Deep, robust jack-shaped body with a strongly forked tail
- Prominent black spot on the upper gill cover behind the pectoral fin
- Yellow to dusky fins and a bluish-green to silvery body with a steep forehead profile
Habitat
Warm-temperate to tropical Atlantic coastal waters, including surf zones, bays, estuaries, harbors, reefs, and nearshore drop-offs; juveniles often use sheltered inshore waters.
Bait notes
Live baitfish such as mullet, pilchards, sardines, and shrimp are effective; cut bait can also work. Topwater plugs, metal spoons, bucktails, and fast-retrieved jigs draw strikes when fish are feeding near the surface or around bait schools.
Behavior
Schools of juveniles are common inshore, while larger fish are often solitary or in small groups. They feed aggressively on sardines, menhaden, anchovies, mullet, shrimp, and squid, often chasing prey to the surface.
Caution
Very strong fighter with hard runs that can stress light tackle; use care handling the fish because the dorsal and anal fin spines are sharp. Check local regulations and size/bag limits, as rules vary by region.
Fishing notes
Target moving schools, current edges, inlets, points, and surf troughs. Use strong terminal tackle and quick retrieves; this species fights hard and can break light gear. Sight-casting to busting fish and working lures through bait schools are productive.