Fishing Tips -- Fish Where they Live!
 

Fishing Tips -- The Secret is Fishing in the Right Place

Studying undersea habitats is vitally important to successful fishermen and angler or enthusiast who wants to understand the links between how fish behave or eat and where they prefer to live. North Atlantic open seas, Caribbean deep blue waters, tropical reefs, shallow tidal flats, deep sea wrecks, Pacific estuaries, saltwater marshes, Florida mangrove rivers, Central American flats, New England surf: Each of these fish habitats provides the best combination of shelter, food supply, light, and water temperature for particular species. 

Saltwater fishing more often than not involves fishing a particular sort of water, or habitat, for a range of related species rather than one particular fish. Most blue-water charter boats rig skip baits to catch any number of fast-swimming species. The reef fisher is "grab-bagging" for all sorts of fish. The giant bottom-fishing party boats will haul up flatfish, tautog, cod, and many other species. The flats fisher is often equipped to catch tarpon or bonefish. The surf fisher, who baits his or her own hook, and makes individual decisions about where and how to fish will be prepared to pursue any number of species, depending on which fish are running or biting during a particular season.

Fishing the Major Fish Habitats

SHALLOW TIDAL WATERS OVER SAND AND VEGETATION, FLATS:
Warm Water: tarpon, permit, ladyfish, bonefish, machete, horse-eye jack, spotted sea trout, barracuda, jack fish

Cold and Temperate Water: weakfish, striped bass 

ESTUARIES, BRACKISH COASTAL RIVERS, AND INLETS 
Warm Water: Snook, tarpon, jacks, spotted sea trout, Atlantic croaker, red drum, black drum, gulf flounder and Snapper 

DEEP SMOOTH SEA BOTTOMS 
Warm water: gulf flounder, diamond turbot, naked sole 

Warm and Temperate Water: Pacific tomcod, Pacific ocean whitefish, African pompano, jack fish, Pacific halibut, California halibut, English sole 

Cold Water: cod, haddock, hake, rock sole, winter flounder, lingcod, Atlantic halibut 

OFFSHORE SHELVES AND CHANNELS DROP-OFFS 
Warm Water: yellowtail, permit, bigeye, southern kingfish, Atlantic croaker, red drum, redfish 

Cold and Temperate Water: striped bass, bluefish, white sea bass, weakfish, redtail surfperch, black perch, rainbow sea-perch or sea-bass, cobia 

SHALLOW REEFS, SHALLOW ROCKY BOTTOMS, KELP BEDS, AND ISLAND CHANNELS 
Warm and Temperate Water: black grouper, jack fish, horse-eye jack, yellowtail, red snapper, yellowtail snapper, barracuda, bigeye and snapper 

Cold and Temperate Water: jack mackerel, redtail surfperch, black perch, kelp perch, striped sea-perch, walleye sea-perch

OPEN OFFSHORE OCEAN SURFACE AND MIDDLE DEPTHS 
Warm Water cobia, rainbow runner, amberjack, wahoo, dolphin, skipjack tuna, chub mackerel, king mackerel, bigeye tuna, Sailfish, spearfish, redfish 

Warm and Temperate Water bluefish, Atlantic bonito, bullet mackerel, little tuna, Spanish mackerel, albacore, yellowfin tuna, bluefin tuna, swordfish, blue and black marlin, white marlin, sailfish, striped marlin 

Cold Water  Atlantic mackerel, Atlantic salmon

 
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We found this to be the reported world record Tarpon caught in 1956 -- 286 pounds!