BREAM
(Lepomis macrochirus)
Common Names - bream, bluegill, blue bream,
sun perch, blue sunfish, copperhead, copperbelly.
Description -
Bluegills have small mouths and oval-shaped, almost
rounded, bodies. Body coloration is highly variable
with size, sex, spawning, water color, bottom type,
and amount of cover. In general, they are somewhat
lavender and bronze with about six dark bars on their
sides. Males tend to have a copper-colored bar over
the top of the head behind the eyes. The breast is
silver to slightly blue most of the year, with some
yellow or orange during spawning season. Females are
generally lighter colored than males. Two distinctive
characteristics are the prominent black spot on the
rear edge of the gill-cover and a black spot at the
base of the posterior portion of the dorsal fin.
Habitat - Bluegills
prefer the quiet, weedy waters where they can hide and
feed. They inhabit lakes and ponds, slow-flowing
rivers and streams with sand, mud, or gravel bottoms,
near aquatic vegetation.
Spawning
Habits - Bluegills are well known for
"bedding" in large groups, with their
circular beds touching one another. Bedding occurs in
water two to six feet deep over sand, shell or gravel,
and often among plant roots when the bottom is soft.
Spawning occurs from April through October with the
peak in May and June, when water temperature rises to
about 78-80 degrees. A female may lay 2,000 to 63,000
eggs, which hatch 30 to 35 hours after fertilization.
Feeding Habits -
Insects, insect larvae and crustaceans are the
dominant foods of bluegills, with vegetation, fish
eggs, small fish, mollusks, and snails being of
secondary importance, although they may dominate their
diet during certain times of the year.
Age
and Growth - Growth is rapid in Georgia. A
one-year-old fish may be four inches long. Spawning
may occur the first year. Bluegills can live up to 11
years, but most are less than 7 years old. The rate of
growth varies considerably in different bodies of
water. However, a six-inch bluegill in Georgia is
typically two to four years old.
Sporting Qualities -
Because of its willingness to take a variety of
natural baits (e.g., crickets, grass shrimp, worms)
and artificial lures (e.g., small spinners or popping
bugs) during the entire year, its gameness when
hooked, and its excellent food qualities, the bluegill
is one of the more important sport fish in Georgia and
the eastern United States.
Eating Quality -
Excellent; the flesh is white, flaky, firm and sweet.
They are generally rolled in cornmeal or dipped in
pancake batter before frying. Many rank the bluegill
as the most delicious of all freshwater fish.
World Record - 4
pounds, 12 ounces, caught in Ketona Lake, Alabama, in
1950.
