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Black bullheads are very difficult to distinguish from brown bullheads. It is unclear whether the few individuals reported in Connecticut represent self-sustaining populations.
Their abundance makes them very important forage fish for many marine predators such as striped bass, fluke and seabirds.
Also called “calico bass,” crappie grow quickly and are a popular food and sport fish.
Blacknose dace are a native minnow that prefer the pools and rocky riffles of small headwater streams.
Rarity and difficulty with identification cause the blackspotted stickleback’s whereabouts in Connecticut to be unclear.
Brown trout can grow to large sizes and are generally harder to catch than brook or rainbow trout.
Brook trout prefer small, cold streams with gravel or cobble bottoms and adequate cover.
The brown bullhead is Connecticut’s most widely distributed and only native catfish species. They are good to eat, but are typically underutilized by anglers.
This easily overlooked minnow, the bridle shiner, is apparently declining throughout much of its range.
The channel catfish is the state’s largest catfish species.
The chain pickerel is Connecticut’s largest native freshwater predatory fish. Before the introduction of bass, it was the top predator in the state’s lakes and ponds.
The burbot is the only completely freshwater member of the cod family. Little is known of its life history in Connecticut.
Although central mudminnows look superficially like minnows or killifish, they are actually more closely related to pickerel and pike.
Cutlip minnows are known to sometimes knock out and eat the eyes of other fishes.
Creek chubsucker populations have reportedly declined in streams that are subject to siltation.