here is a link to a picture of the color baby blue.
http://www.greenbeans.co.nz/index.php?main_page=popup_image&pID=1114&zenid=ccaee2f588df81cb2a4094bc0cd4d9e0
Hope it helps!
Worms, crickets work best. Some small artificials like poppers and small in line spinnerbaits, flies.
No it is a carnivore and eats worms, snails, slugs, insects, centipedes, spiders and other invertebrates.
Bluegill are in the sunfish family, which is a rather common group of fishes. Some others are:
Largemouth bass
Smallmouth bass
Redear sunfish
Black crappie
White crappie
Warmouth
Pumpkinseed
Flier
Spotted bass
Coosa bass
Rock bass
Roanoke bass
Long ear sunfish
The basic rule of thumb is "not more than an inch of fish to a gallon of water."
The Bluegill is a species of freshwater fish sometimes referred to as bream, brim, or copper nose. It is a member of the sunfish family (family Centrarchidae) of order Perciformes. It is native to a wide area of North America, from Québec to northern Mexico, and has been widely transplanted to stock game fish for anglers. It is commonly fished in Arkansas, Minnesota, Michigan, Wisconsin, Texas, and Louisiana, and is the state fish of the U.S. state of Illinois. It is renowned as an excellent tasting fish. They are relatively common and easy to catch.[
Catfish, bass, pike, bowfin. Herons, cormorant, anhingha, otter, mink, humans.
The last answer was horrible. Yes largemouth eat bluegill. I was fishing earlier today in an acre and a half pond. My bait of choice was a 3-4 inch bluegill. I let the bluegill swim 3-6 feet from the shore, after about 10 minutes a largemouth approx. 22 inches started circling the bluegill like a shark. The bass continued to circle not even paying attention to 3 humans standing on the bank. We he was convinced the meal was good he sucked the bluegill in his mouth. I've never seen anything like it.
Bluegill are an abundant sunfish species, and are prey for largemouth bass and pike species, as well as humans, otters, osprey, and many creatures. They are also predators themselves, feeding on smaller fishes, insects, fish eggs.
Well, the average cost of 100ml of BlueGill costs around £1,500. It it made from many different elements, all of which are expensive and of rarity. I commend you highly for having the altitude and the reverence to ask this question, but I also doubt that you will be able to find the money to pay for this item.
Yours faithfully,
David Camolovski.
Feeder fish, small lancefish, goldfish or minnows if you can find them live. Also try blood worms, I find that large carniverous fish enjoy them and they are quite affordable and easy to store.
I had wild bluegill in my ponds and they did quite well eating whatever fell into the pond and/or tried to land on the surface. They also would eat koi food and goldfish flakes but they prefered softer food (didn't like hard pellets). They seemed to prefer to eat food on the surface.
I have caught them as big as my hand when it is open and the fingers are held flat and together. I have big hands. About a pound I guess. Bluegill can approach 5 pounds in size,but that is rare.I know our record here in North Carolina is four pounds,fifteen ounces.Another sunfish,the redear,can also grow to four pounds.
Madison on the wall at the convention center or on john nolen drive behind the bicycle shop just to the right maybe a 1000 fee excellent fihing area
Yes; you can use live bluegill and any other live fish except for trout and salmon as live bait *in the body of water where it was caught*. You're violating the law if you...
a) Catch them and move to a different body of water to fish with them
b) Use them as cut bait in any body of water
In the case of (a) it can be a grey area, especially of the body of water doesn't have a clear cut boundary (Northern California Delta for example). Just don't blatantly violate the law (i.e. pull up to the parking lot at your favorite lake with a bucket full of bluegill in your car and all your gear packed up) and you should be ok.
See section 4.20
http://nrm.dfg.ca.gov/FileHandler.ashx?DocumentID=10351
Good Luck!
JD
a bluegill is a consumer because they are feeders that feed other organisms for food rather than produce their own through photosynthesis and yes bluegill is a carnivore
AL