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Sheepshead are abundant in the water of Homosassa.  This is another fish I seldom target, although they are quite tasty.  They are hard to fillet.  The sheepshead are also notorious bait stealers.  Common tactics seem to be finding rocks and wrecks were they congregate to spawn.  I have usually caught them in the Homosassa River while fishing for other species in the winter time.

Sheepshead


 

Family Sparidae, PORGIES
Archosargus probatocephalus


Description: basic silvery color; with 5 or 6 distinct vertical black bands on sides, not always the same on both sides; prominent teeth, including incisors, molars, and rounded grinders; no barbels on lower jaw; strong and sharp spines on dorsal and anal fins.

Similar Fish: black drum, Pogonias cromis; Atlantic spadefish, Chaetodipterus (black drum have barbels on lower jaw, sheepshead do not; vertical barring on sides of black drum and spadefish disappear as fish mature; spadefish have small, brush-like teeth).

Where found: INSHORE species around oyster bars, seawalls and in tidal creeks; moves NEARSHORE in late winter and early spring for spawning, gathering over debris, artificial reefs and around navigation markers.

Size: INSHORE, 1 to 2 pounds; OFFSHORE, common to 8 pounds.

*Florida Record: 12 lbs., 2 ozs.

Remarks: feeds on mollusks and crustaceans such as fiddler crabs and barnacles; famed nibblers, prompting the saying that "anglers must strike just before they bite."

* The Florida records quoted are from the Department of Environmental Protection's printed publication, Fishing Lines and are not necessarily the most current ones. The records are provided as only as a benchmark.

Regulations


Min. Size Limits: 12"

Closed Seasons: None.

Daily Rec. Bag Limit:  15 per person per day.

Remarks:  Measured from the most forward point of the head to the rear center edge of the tail.