Eastern Mosquitofish
Gambusia holbrooki
Eastern Mosquitofish is a small livebearing minnows in the poeciliid family, native to the southeastern United States and widely introduced elsewhere. It thrives in still, warm, shallow waters and is best known for eating mosquito larvae, not as a sport fish.

Identification points
- Small slender body, usually under 5 cm, with a rounded head and upturned mouth
- Gray-olive back with a silvery side stripe and often dark barring or a spot near the rear flank
- Female larger than male; males are smaller and have a modified anal fin (gonopodium)
Habitat
Shallow, warm freshwater and lightly brackish margins of ponds, ditches, marshes, slow creeks, canals, rice fields, and other still or sluggish water with dense vegetation or surface cover.
Bait notes
Rarely targeted as a game fish. If collecting for bait or observation, tiny food items like crushed flakes, bread crumbs, mosquito larvae, or very small soft plastics can attract them; they often strike minute flies or jigs under floats.
Behavior
Opportunistic surface and midwater feeder that picks at mosquito larvae, tiny insects, zooplankton, and algae. Males are territorial and the species is highly tolerant of low oxygen, crowding, and variable salinity.
Caution
Check local rules before collecting or transporting; this species is invasive in many areas and may be restricted. It is tiny and not a food fish.
Fishing notes
Use ultralight gear, a small hook, and no or minimal weight in shallow weed edges or ditch margins. Slow drift or still presentation near the surface works best; many anglers simply dip-net them where legal.