California Sheephead
Semicossyphus pulcher

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Overview
Oceans & Range: Eastern Pacific Ocean — from Monterey Bay south to Baja California and the Gulf of California. Found in and around kelp beds and rocky reefs in 10–280 feet. A very common Southern California and Channel Islands species — found in virtually every kelp forest. Uses its large crushing teeth to eat sea urchins, crabs, and mussels.
Preferred Water Temperature: 55°F–70°F. Closely associated with kelp bed environments. A sequential hermaphrodite — all fish are born female and dominant individuals change to male. Males have distinctive black head and tail with red mid-section; females are uniformly pink-red.
Size & Weight: Typically 2–8 lbs. Trophy males reach 35+ lbs. World record: 37 lbs 8 oz. An important keystone species in the kelp forest ecosystem — its predation of sea urchins helps prevent kelp destruction. Excellent eating — sweet, white meat. Minimum size and bag limits apply in California.
Best Lures: Large jigs bounced near rocky bottom produce strikes. Large swimbaits work around kelp edges. Heavy bucktail jigs tipped with squid are effective near the base of kelp.
Best Baits: Fresh whole crabs are the top bait. Sea urchin meat is excellent. Fresh squid works well. Fresh shrimp produce strikes. Clam and mussels are effective. Large males are highly territorial — fish near structure and kelp bed edges for best results.
Identifying
Water Conditions
Tackle & Bait
Size & Sport
Whoppers — Biggest Catches
State & Agency Records
1 official record on file for California Sheephead