Emerald Shiner
Notropis atherinoides
Emerald Shiner is a small, silvery North American minnow common in large lakes, reservoirs, and connected rivers. It often forms dense schools near open water and shorelines, and it is an important forage fish for many game species.

Identification points
- Bright emerald-green to bluish iridescence on the back and sides
- Deeply forked tail and a slender, laterally compressed minnow body
- Small terminal mouth with a silvery belly and translucent fins
Habitat
Open-water edges of large lakes, bays, harbors, reservoir coves, and slow to moderate rivers with plankton-rich water; often schools over sand, silt, or scattered vegetation and moves near shore at night or under low light.
Bait notes
Usually caught as baitfish on small sabiki rigs, micro-jigs, tiny spoons, or ultra-small hooks baited with maggots, worms, or bits of dough; it is not a major target sport fish.
Behavior
A schooling plankton-and-insect feeder that also takes tiny crustaceans; highly light-oriented and often gathers around current seams, marinas, bridge lights, and shoreline wash. Spawns in spring and early summer over clean gravel or rubble in flowing water.
Caution
No notable human consumption hazard is specific to emerald shiner, but as a small forage fish it is often used live or dead for bait; check local regulations on baitfish transport and use.
Fishing notes
Use ultralight tackle, tiny hooks, and minimal weight; chum or fish near lights to gather schools. Slow, steady retrieves or dead-sticking small offerings work best when they are milling near the surface or midwater.