Brook Silverside
Labidesthes sicculus
Brook Silverside is a small, slender, translucent forage fish common in clear to moderately clear lakes, reservoirs, and slow rivers. It feeds near the surface on tiny zooplankton and insects and is more often an incidental catch than a targeted sport fish.

Identification points
- Very slender, pencil-like body with a strongly translucent look
- Single dorsal fin set far back on the body, with the anal fin positioned similarly far rearward
- Distinct dark lateral band and projecting lower jaw in adults
Habitat
Shoals, weed edges, open-water nearshore zones, and calm backwaters in lakes, reservoirs, and slow-moving rivers; often schools in upper water layers over sand or fine gravel.
Bait notes
Rarely targeted intentionally. Tiny hooks with bits of worm, maggot, or small insect imitations can catch them incidentally; very small micro-jigs, plain sabiki-style rigs, and fine dry or wet flies may work when they are surface-feeding.
Behavior
Schooling, surface-oriented planktivore that darts in short bursts and feeds visually on zooplankton, insect larvae, and drifting insects; most active in warm, calm conditions.
Caution
Not a notable food fish; too small for practical harvest and generally handled as bycatch. Standard care with tiny hooks and fish slime applies, and local regulations may limit use as bait or collection in some waters.
Fishing notes
Use ultralight tackle and small hooks near the surface, especially around calm coves, weed lines, and dock lights. Steady retrieves and tiny presentations matter more than scent; they are delicate and often hooked while targeting other panfish.