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.
Bluegill will eat any species of tiny fish.
bluegill eat fish food aka your mams vagina
Yes. But large catfish eat small bluegill.
Yes
Bass and bluegill do well in ponds.
Bass and bluegill are nearly always used together to stock farm ponds. The bass eat bluegill to keep the population in check, and bluegills will eat bass eggs, so a balance is kept.
Insects, worms, small fish.
I not really sure but my bass eats bluegill
Bluegills eat insects, worms, tiny fish, fish eggs, even algae.
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.
A bluegill is a consumer, specifically classified as an omnivorous fish. It feeds on both plants and small aquatic animals like insects and crustaceans, making it a consumer within the aquatic food chain.
The bluegill is in the Panfish catagory.