Smallmouth Bass

Over 1,000 pages of information and pictures about fish, recipes, clubs, fishing, rods and reels and fishing guides. We are the largest fishing site on the Internet and rapidly becoming the most popular because there is so much more to learn.

Updated Fishing Site
for 1,255 pages and 18,000 links to Fresh and Saltwater fishing, guides, rods, reels, lures, where and how to fish and everything you would want to know about fishing.

Free Links to our 5,250,000 visitors

Easy Fish Recipes
Over 1,000 delicious easy to make recipes for both Fresh and Salt Water Fish

American Flag

Smallmouth Bass
Bookmark this valuable site


Bookmark this valuable site

Thank you for visiting Smallmouth Bass. We try to provide you with the most complete information we can about fish and fishing. We update our sources constantly. Please scroll down to learn more.

This member of the sunfish family is also called northern smallmouth bass, smallmouth black bass, black bass, and brown bass.

Distribution
The smallmouth bass is a freshwater fish originally found in lakes and rivers of eastern and central North America. As a result of widespread introductions, it now ranges from south and central Nova Scotia and New Brunswick, south to Georgia, west to Oklahoma, north to Minnesota, west to North Dakota, and east from southern Manitoba to Quebec. It also occurs in a few areas of western North America and has been introduced in Europe, Asia, and Africa.

Physical Characteristics The smallmouth bass has the following characteristics: * A robust, slightly laterally compressed body. * Its colour varies from brown, golden brown, olive to green on the back becoming lighter to golden on the sides and white on the belly. * It has 8-15 narrow, vertical bars on the sides and dark bars on the head that radiate backwards from the eyes. * Its head is relatively large, with a large red, orange, or brown eye, and its lower jaw protrudes. * Its two dorsal fins are joined; the front one is spiny and the second one has one spine followed by soft rays. * Its pelvic fins sit forward on the body below the pectoral fins; a single spine is found on each pelvic fin, and the front of the anal fin. * Young fish have more distinct vertical bars or rows of spots on their sides and the caudal or tail fin is orange at the base followed by black and then white outer edges. * Smallmouth bass can weigh over 4 kg (9 lb) in parts of central Canada, but usually do not exceed 1.1 kg (2.5 lb) in Nova Scotia.

Facts About Smallmouth Bass
Some male smallmouth bass return to the same nest year after year; over 85% of them build their nest within 138 m (150 yd) of where they nested in earlier years.

The world record smallmouth bass was caught in Kentucky, U.S.A. in 1955 and weighed 5.4 kg (11.9 lb). It measured 68.6 cm (27 in) long and 54.9 cm (21.7 in) in girth. The Canadian record was caught in Ontario in 1954 and weighed 9.84 lb. They have been seen "sunning" in pools with water temperatures of 26.7ºC.

Natural History The male prepares a nest on a sandy, gravel or rocky bottom by cleaning an area 0.3 to 1.8 m (1-6 ft) in diameter. He defends the nest from other males and attracts a series of females into the nest to spawn. After spawning, the female leaves and the male remains to guard the nest and fan the eggs. Females usually produce 5,000-14,000 eggs, depending on their size. The eggs are 1.2-2.5 mm in diameter and stick to stones in the bottom of the nest.

The young are about 5.8 mm long when they hatch in 4 to 10 days depending on the temperature. Sudden changes in temperature or water level can cause the eggs to die from shock or cause the male to abandon the nest, leaving it open for predators. The male protects the young as they absorb their yolk sac and continues to guard them for 3 to 4 weeks until they begin to leave the nest. Young fish tend to stay in quiet, shallow areas with rocks and vegetation. They begin feeding on plankton (tiny organisms suspended in the water) and switch to larger prey like water insects, amphibians, and other fish as they grow. Two-year old bass are about 12.7 cm (5 in) long.

Older bass prefer rocky, shallow areas of lakes and rivers and retreat to deeper water during high water temperature periods. Most bass do not travel great distances and those in streams spend all season in the same pool. Smallmouth bass mature at ages 3-6, when they are about 17-28 cm (6.7-11 in) long. They are known to live 15 years.

Some smallmouth bass predators are yellow perch, catfishes, white suckers, turtles, and chain pickerel.

Jumping Dolphin

This link will take you to our Index where you can choose from 1,255 pages of Fishing Guides, Fish Pictures and Information, Salt and Freshwater Fishing, Bow fishing; also Clubs, Fish Recipes, Fish Biology, Fish History, Fishing Tips most with Forums and Educational Information

Fish Jumping