The best ways are to close the mouth, and see if the jaw extends past the eye slightly. If it does, it is a largemouth. Secondly, spotted bass have a series of small dark spots below the lateral line. Also, largemouth are somewhat larger, and prefer shallower water.
Bass in the genus Micropterus, the largemouth, smallmouth, spotted, and Coosa bass all love crayfish.
The largemouth, smallmouth, and spotted bass are actually sunfish. The true basses are the white bass, striped bass, and yellow bass, and white perch, of the Morone group.
Both..More common in warm water environments.
yes
Yes, largemouth bass have gills.
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
no, peacock bass are related to cichlids, largemouth are sunfish
Native to the midwest, the "Kentucky" or more correctly spotted bass, has been introduced in other areas of the country. Related to largemouth and smallmouth basses.
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.
Largemouth and spotted bass, several varieties of catfish and sunfish, bowfin, gar, striped bass, white bass, white perch. Also several varieties of minnows.
Freshwater gamefish include: Largemouth bass Smallmouth bass spotted bass Striped bass White bass Rainbow, brook, brown, golden trouts Salmon species Northern pike Pickerel Muskellunge
how do bass migrate