The Guadalupe bass, a species native to Texas, is preyed upon by various predators in its habitat. Common predators include larger fish species such as bass, catfish, and pike. Birds such as herons and egrets may also hunt juvenile Guadalupe bass. Additionally, aquatic mammals like otters can pose a threat to these fish.
buck choy
Largemouth bass
all i can think iswhalesharkbigger fish
Bass muskie minks
The Latin Names for the Guadalupe Bass is MICROPTERUS TRECULII meaning "small fin"
It is in the Sunfish family.
The Guadalupe bass is primarily a carnivore, feeding on smaller fish, insects, and other aquatic organisms. While it may occasionally consume plant material, its diet mainly consists of animal matter. This makes it an opportunistic predator in its freshwater habitat.
No. The Guadalupe is a Micropterus species, related to largemouth, smallmouth, and spotted bass, and like them, feeds on small fish, crayfish, insects and frogs.
Many, too many to name here. The freshwater black basses, allied to sunfish, include: largemouth bass smallmouth bass spotted bass coosa bass Suwannee bass shoal bass Guadalupe bass
I not really sure but my bass eats bluegill
Humans and sometimes other bass! Isn't that cool
Largemouth bass