Body Type & Identification: Deep-bodied, olive-green to brown with irregular mottled sides. The only sunfish native to the western United States — all other sunfish west of the Rockies are introduced. A remnant population native to the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta system now more common in introduced western reservoirs than in its native range.
Preferred Water Temperature: 65°F–78°F. Tolerates alkali and saline conditions that kill other sunfish — an important adaptation for Great Basin lakes. Reproduces successfully in alkaline lakes where most other sunfish fail.
Habitat: Native to the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta — now rare in its native range due to competition from introduced sunfish. Thriving populations exist in several Great Basin reservoirs including Crowley Lake and Pyramid Lake area waters in California and Nevada. Prefers vegetated, slow-water environments.
Best Lures: Small jigs and soft plastics produce catches. Small poppers work during the spawn. Any small panfish lure produces results from willing fish.
Best Baits: Small worms are the top bait. Crickets work well. Small minnows produce larger specimens. Small pieces of nightcrawler catch fish consistently. Light tackle with natural bait near vegetation.
Top 5 Destinations: Crowley Lake CA, Bridgeport Reservoir CA, Pyramid Lake NV area waters, Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta CA (remnant populations).
Deep-bodied, olive-green to brown with irregular mottled sides. The only sunfish native to the western United States — all other sunfish west of the Rockies are introduced. A remnant population native to the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta system now more common in introduced western reservoirs than in its native range.
Habitat
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Native to the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta — now rare in its native range due to competition from introduced sunfish. Thriving populations exist in several Great Basin reservoirs including Crowley Lake and Pyramid Lake area waters in California and Nevada. Prefers vegetated, slow-water environments.
Water Conditions
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65°F–78°F. Tolerates alkali and saline conditions that kill other sunfish — an important adaptation for Great Basin lakes. Reproduces successfully in alkaline lakes where most other sunfish fail.
Tackle & Bait
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Best Lures:
Small jigs and soft plastics produce catches. Small poppers work during the spawn. Any small panfish lure produces results from willing fish.
Best Baits:
Small worms are the top bait. Crickets work well. Small minnows produce larger specimens. Small pieces of nightcrawler catch fish consistently. Light tackle with natural bait near vegetation.
Top Fishing Locations
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Filter by State:
9 fishing locations where you can catch Sacramento Perch
Bridgeport Reservoir
🏞️ Freshwater
Bridgeport, CA
Copco Lake
🏞️ Freshwater
Copco, CA
Crowley Lake
🏞️ Freshwater
Mammoth Lakes, CA
Granite Park Pond
🏞️ Freshwater
Sacramento, CA
Gull Lake
🏞️ Freshwater
June Lake, CA
Pyramid Lake
🏞️ Freshwater
Sutcliffe, NV
Washoe Lake
🏞️ Freshwater
Washoe City, NV
Lost River
🏞️ Freshwater
Bonanza, OR
Pruess Lake
🏞️ Freshwater
Garrison, Utah
From the Angler's Guide
Crowley Lake CA, Bridgeport Reservoir CA, Pyramid Lake NV area waters, Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta CA (remnant populations).
Whoppers — Biggest Catches
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🥇
2.75 lbs
Jack
Bridgeport Reservoir, Bridgeport, CAMay 12, 2019
🥈
2.68 lbs
Lance Modispacher
Crowley Lake, Mammoth Lakes, CAJun 30, 2019
State & Agency Records
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4 official records on file for Sacramento Perch
🥇
4 lbs. 9 oz.
L: 17.0"
John Battcher
Pyramid Lake, Sutcliffe, NVJul 18, 1971Freshwater AnglingNDOW
#2
4 lbs. 5 oz.
L: 17.0" · G: 15.0"
Harlan G. Thomas
Pruess Lake, Garrison, UtahJan 1, 1993Freshwater AnglingUT DWR
#3
3 lbs. 10 oz.
Jack Johnson
Crowley Lake, Mammoth Lakes, CAMay 22, 1979Freshwater AnglingCDFW
#4
11 oz.
Jonathan Cogley
Lost River, Bonanza, ORJan 1, 1998Freshwater AnglingODFW