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  • Black Bullhead

    Black bullheads are very difficult to distinguish from brown bullheads. It is unclear whether the few individuals reported in Connecticut represent self-sustaining populations.

  • Atlantic Silverside

    Their abundance makes them very important forage fish for many marine predators such as striped bass, fluke and seabirds.

  • Black Crappie

    Also called “calico bass,” crappie grow quickly and are a popular food and sport fish.

  • Blacknose Dace

    Blacknose dace are a native minnow that prefer the pools and rocky riffles of small headwater streams.

  • Blackspotted Stickleback

    Rarity and difficulty with identification cause the blackspotted stickleback’s whereabouts in Connecticut to be unclear.

  • Brown Trout

    Brown trout can grow to large sizes and are generally harder to catch than brook or rainbow trout.

  • Brook Trout

    Brook trout prefer small, cold streams with gravel or cobble bottoms and adequate cover.

  • Brown Bullhead

    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.

  • Bridle Shiner

    This easily overlooked minnow, the bridle shiner, is apparently declining throughout much of its range.

  • Channel Catfish

    The channel catfish is the state’s largest catfish species.

  • Chain Pickerel

    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.

  • Burbot

    The burbot is the only completely freshwater member of the cod family. Little is known of its life history in Connecticut.

  • Central Mudminnow

    Although central mudminnows look superficially like minnows or killifish, they are actually more closely related to pickerel and pike.

  • Cutlip Minnow

    Cutlip minnows are known to sometimes knock out and eat the eyes of other fishes.

  • Creek Chubsucker

    Creek chubsucker populations have reportedly declined in streams that are subject to siltation.