Pumpkinseed
Lepomis gibbosus
Pumpkinseed is a small, colorful North American sunfish with a laterally compressed body and a red-edged opercular flap. It lives in warm, calm freshwater and often nests in colonies in shallow water.

Identification points
- Distinct black rear spot on the soft dorsal fin base and a smaller black ear-flap spot
- Blue-green facial lines and orange-to-red speckling on the breast and sides
- Short, rounded pectoral fin and a vivid red/orange margin on the opercular flap
Habitat
Shallow weedy ponds, lakes, slow streams, bayous, and backwaters with cover such as submerged vegetation, docks, roots, and woody debris; prefers warm, clear to stained freshwater.
Bait notes
Best on small worms, crickets, grasshoppers, mealworms, maggots, and bits of nightcrawler; tiny jigs, spinners, and soft plastics in natural colors also work.
Behavior
Opportunistic feeder that eats aquatic insects, small crustaceans, worms, snails, and tiny fish. Males are territorial in spawning season and will aggressively strike small offerings near nests.
Caution
Spiny dorsal and anal fins can poke; handle carefully. In some regions it is non-native and may be subject to local regulations or encouraged removal; check local rules.
Fishing notes
Use ultralight tackle with size 8-14 hooks and light line. Fish close to weed edges, shade, and shallow nesting areas; a slow retrieve or dead-stick presentation is often effective.