Bass Rock Fish (lat. Ambloplites rupestris)
The rock bass is actually a member of the sunfish family and
is not a true bass. Rock bass are fun to catch because they
can be caught on many types of baits and lures, and they
put up a decent fight on ultralight tackle. Rock bass are
known to overpopulate small lakes, making population control
measures necessary.
OTHER NAMES:
black perch, goggle-eye,
red eye, rock sunfish,
goggle-eye perch;
French:
crapet de roche.
Although it looks like a cross between a
bluegill and a black bass, the rock bass is actually a large
and robust sunfish with a deep body; it is less compressed
than most sunfish and is more similar to a black bass in
shape. The back is raised, and the large head is narrow,
rounded, and deep. The mouth of the rock bass is large in
comparison to other sunfish; the upper jaw reaches beyond
the beginning of the eye but not to the back of the eye. It
has two connected dorsal fins, five to six anal fin spines, and
large eyes.
The rock bass is olive brown or bronze on the back and
sides, with faint lines of tiny dark marks; the centers of the
scales below the lateral line also have dark markings that
form 11 or more rows and give the fish a striped appearance.
In some rock bass, the coloring is lighter but consistent
underneath, whereas others are silver, gray, or white on
the bellies. The ventral fins have pale circular spots, and all
fins are usually darker at their margins, although the edges
of the anal spines are white, the tips of the pectoral fins are
clear, and the pelvic fins sometimes have a white edge. A
distinguishing characteristic is the bluish-black blotch found
on the tips of the gill covers.
Rock bass are frequently confused with the warmouth. Warmouth have teeth on
their tongue, whereas rock bass do not. There are also six
spines in front of the anal fin of a rock bass, as opposed to
the three spines in the warmouth. Rock bass may resemble
the mud sunfish as well ; rock bass have forked tails and rough scales, whereas mud sunfish have
rounded tails and smooth scales.
The most common size for rock bass is about 8
ounces, although they have been known to reach 3
pounds. Often, rock bass in a particular lake will weigh
around a pound, with a few fish exceeding 2 pounds. As
with most sunfish, however, size is extremely variable, and
rock bass living in streams are often stunted. The all-tackle
record is a 3-pound Canadian fish.
Rock bass can reach a length of 12 to 14 inches but are
usually less than 8 inches long. Although aquarium fish have
lived for 18 years, those in the wild live 10 to 12 years on
average.
Rock bass are able to reproduce
once they are 2 years old or 3 to 5 inches long; spawning
occurs from midspring to early summer, when water temperatures
range from 60° to 70°F. Males move into the shallows
3 to 4 days prior to the females’ arrival, to establish
territories. They begin building round nests in gravelly or
sandy areas near weedbeds or other protection, such as
submerged tree trunks, using their pectoral, anal, and caudal
fins to fan the gravel for the nests.
Spawning occurs during the day, usually in the morning.
The females spawn at least twice, moving from nest to nest
and laying from 3,000 to 11,000 eggs in total. The males
guard the nests until the eggs hatch and the young swim
away, and many males nest a second or even a third time.
Rock bass are a schooling fish and often cluster with
other sunfish and smallmouth bass.
Young rock bass feed on
minute aquatic life when young, then on insects and crustaceans
as they grow. Adults eat mostly crayfish, as well as
minnows, insects, mollusks, and small fish. This diet varies
with season and location. They can consume relatively large
specimens because of their large mouths. Rock bass generally
feed on the bottom but may occasionally feed near the
surface.
Native to
the northeastern United
States and southeastern
Canada, rock bass range
from southern Manitoba
east to Ontario and
Quebec, and southward
through the Great Lakes
region and the Mississippi
Valley to the Gulf of Mexico
and as far east as northern
Alabama and northern
Georgia. They have been
introduced into other states,
including some in the western
United States.
Rock bass prefer
small to moderate streams
with cool and clear water,
abundant shelter, and considerable
current; they are
plentiful in shallow, weedy
lakes and the outer edges of
larger lakes, as well as in
thousands of smaller lakes
and ponds. Rock bass
almost always hold over
rocky bottoms (resulting in
the name “rock” bass)
where there is no silt. Young rock bass are frequently
found in vegetation. Rock
bass tend to frequent the
same habitats as do smallmouth
bass.