Round Sunfish nest in warm, shallow waters

The male protects the eggs from predators.

All Fish are awesome! Rich learned that firsthand. As a young boy, he spent hours watching male sunfish guard their saucer-shaped nests in the shallow water of Cedar Lake.

Sunfish

Sunfish are awesome! This huge family of fish flip-flops the way nature normally defines child-rearing. In most animals, the female gets the work. That’s not how sunfish families operate.

Male sunfish provide primary child care. He makes a nest in shallow water every spring over a sandy or pebbly bottom. When it’s finished a female hovers over it and releases hundreds of eggs as he releases millions of tiny sperm. Hopefully egg meets sperm and the now fertilized egg nestles into the sandy nest.

Tough Life

Life’s not easy. Small fish, and especially small sunfish, love feasting on the eggs.   Mom departs with no child-rearing duties, while Dad stands by chasing off any intruder intent on a meal of eggs.

Where Sunfish Live

There are sunfish in nearly every body of relatively warm fresh water from Canada down to the Gulf of Mexico. Even renowned gamefish, like large and smallmouth bass, are in the sunfish family. The most commonly known is the bluegill.  Most sunfish species are on the small side. They’re lumped together as panfish because they’re easy to catch, prolific, and tasty.

Fisherman’s Life

Man holding bluegill

Awesome bluegill!

Rich had the good fortune to grow up next to a New Jersey Lake, where he watched fish and learned how to catch them. A love of fish led to his earning a degree in fishery biology and an early career working with fish in Alaska.

All Fish Are Awesome!

Cover of All Fish Are Awesome book.

Book by Noel Vick

Not all kids are lucky enough to live near a lake, but a new book will help them learn that All Fish Are Awesome. That’s the title of Noel Vick’s new book. Its colorful art shows many amazing fish species of both fresh and saltwater, with a bit of text about each one. It’s a great book for parents or grandparents to share with a child perched in their lap. Then, on a pleasant spring day bring that kid to a nearby lake to spot sunfish nests and maybe even wet a line. It might ignite a lifeline passion for fish and fishing or even lead to a career.

Where to Buy the Book

The book’s available at Amazon  or blueballoonbooks.com.