Honeycomb Rockfish
Sebastes umbosus

Artwork: © SportfishingReport.com Inc
Overview
Oceans & Range: Eastern Pacific Ocean — found along the West Coast from Alaska south to Baja California. Found from Central California to Baja California in 50–300 feet. Named for the honeycomb-like pattern on its sides. A deepwater bottom fish associated with rocky reefs, underwater pinnacles, and rocky structure.
Preferred Water Temperature: 45°F–58°F. A cold-water Pacific species found over rocky reefs and hard structure. Depth range varies by species — from shallow nearshore reefs to several hundred feet.
Size & Weight: Typically 1–5 lbs depending on species. Rockfish are among the longest-lived fish — many species live 50–100+ years. Slow to mature and slow-growing — careful catch-and-release with descending devices is important for conservation.
Best Lures: Soft plastic swimbaits and shrimp imitations on leadhead jigs are the top producers. Vertical jigs worked near rocky bottom produce strikes. Dropper loop rigs with multiple hooks and soft plastics catch fish efficiently. Heavy jigs in sardine or squid colors work at depth.
Best Baits: Fresh squid is the universal top bait for all rockfish. Fresh cut anchovy produces consistent results. Fresh cut sardine works well. Live anchovies produce strikes when available. High-low rigs with two hooks and fresh squid or cut fish near rocky bottom are the standard approach. Always use a descending device to release rockfish caught from depth — barotrauma is a serious mortality concern.
Position in the Water Column: 50–300 feet. Found near the bottom over rocky structure — a bottom-oriented species that stays close to the rocky substrate on offshore banks.