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Canada Fish Species Hub

Fishing for Specific Species in Canada

Fishing for specific species in Canada works best when the species, water type, season, gear, and official rule check all line up. Use this hub to move from a broad fish name to the right profile, then verify the exact province, zone, waterbody, date, and licence rule before fishing.

Quick Start

Choose the fish before choosing the lure

Step 1

Pick a species

Start with one target fish so the water, gear, season, and regulation check stay focused.

Use species finder
Step 2

Check the rules

Species rules change by province, zone, waterbody, date, size, retention, bait, and park status.

Open regulations hub
Step 3

Build the trip

Once the species path is clear, match spots, gear, lodge options, and safety planning to that fish.

Find fishing spots
River trips

Read current first

Fishing rivers for trout, walleye, bass, salmon, pike, or muskie starts with seams, eddies, riffle tails, safe access, and rule checks.

Open river fishing guide
Visibility

Match what fish can see

Water clarity, depth, light, profile, and contrast affect lure choice before species tactics get specific.

Open fish vision guide
Technique

Control the jig

For walleye, lake trout, pike, bass, perch, and whitefish, advanced jigging starts with depth, weight, cadence, line angle, and pause.

Open jigging guide
Season

Choose the timing

Spring, summer, fall, and winter change access, beginner species, gear, safety checks, and official season research.

Open seasonal guide
Conservation

Protect the fishery

Habitat projects, invasive-species prevention, salmon and trout groups, and local stewardship shape the future of each species.

Open conservation guide
Interactive Planner

Interactive Canada Fish Range Planner

Use this planner as a broad research starter. CanadaFever shows species and region matches for planning only; official province, territory, federal, park, tidal, and waterbody sources control the final rules.

Choose a province or territory

Important: This planner is not a stocking database, catch report, season table, licence product, or legal advice. A species can be common in a province and still be closed, protected, stocked-only, specially managed, or restricted on a specific waterbody.

Freshwater classics

Freshwater classics species profiles

Updated profile

Walleye Fishing in Canada

Lakes, reservoirs, rivers, current edges, and ice-fishing basins

Beginner fit: Strong if rules and slot limits are checked first

Open Walleye profile
Predator fish

Predator fish species profiles

Updated profile

Northern Pike Fishing in Canada

Weedy bays, rivers, shallow flats, lake mouths, and cold northern lakes

Beginner fit: Good for action, but handling and leaders matter

Open Northern Pike profile
Updated profile

Muskie Fishing in Canada

Large lakes, weed edges, rock points, rivers, current breaks, and basin-adjacent structure

Beginner fit: Poor as a first species; better after pike or bass experience

Open Muskie profile
Bass and panfish

Bass and panfish species profiles

Updated profile

Smallmouth Bass Fishing in Canada

Clear lakes, rocky rivers, shoals, points, current, and island edges

Beginner fit: Excellent once bass seasons and local exceptions are checked

Open Smallmouth Bass profile
Updated profile

Largemouth Bass Fishing in Canada

Weeds, docks, lily pads, wood, warm bays, and soft-bottom lakes

Beginner fit: Good if anglers match weed cover and check bass seasons first

Open Largemouth Bass profile
Updated profile

Yellow Perch Fishing in Canada

Weed edges, flats, bays, shoals, basins, docks, and ice-fishing areas

Beginner fit: Excellent for families where rules allow harvest

Open Yellow Perch profile
Updated profile

Crappie Fishing in Canada

Weedy bays, docks, brush, basins, marina edges, and spring spawning areas

Beginner fit: Good if schools are found and local limits are checked

Open Crappie profile
Trout, salmon, and char

Trout, salmon, and char species profiles

Updated profile

Lake Trout Fishing in Canada

Cold deep lakes, northern shield lakes, large reservoirs, and ice-fishing basins

Beginner fit: Moderate; depth, cold water, and rules matter

Open Lake Trout profile
Updated profile

Brook Trout Fishing in Canada

Cold streams, spring-fed ponds, remote lakes, beaver ponds, and northern rivers

Beginner fit: Good in stocked or simple water, harder in wild remote water

Open Brook Trout profile
Updated profile

Rainbow Trout and Steelhead Fishing in Canada

Stocked lakes, cold rivers, tailwaters, Great Lakes tributaries, and coastal streams

Beginner fit: Excellent in stocked lakes; advanced in steelhead rivers

Open Rainbow Trout and Steelhead profile
Updated profile

Brown Trout Fishing in Canada

Cold rivers, Great Lakes tributaries, stocked lakes, tailwaters, and spring creeks

Beginner fit: Moderate; wary fish and local rules matter

Open Brown Trout profile
Updated profile

Atlantic Salmon Fishing in Canada

Atlantic rivers, cold pools, runs, estuaries, and managed salmon waters

Beginner fit: Poor without local rules and guidance

Open Atlantic Salmon profile
Updated profile

Chinook Salmon Fishing in Canada

Pacific coastal waters, Great Lakes systems, large rivers, tributaries, and staging areas

Beginner fit: Moderate with guides or simple pier/river plans where legal

Open Chinook Salmon profile
Updated profile

Coho Salmon Fishing in Canada

Pacific coastal water, Great Lakes systems, river mouths, tributaries, and nearshore staging areas

Beginner fit: Good with local timing and rule checks

Open Coho Salmon profile
Updated profile

Arctic Char Fishing in Canada

Northern rivers, Arctic lakes, coastal routes, and cold remote systems

Beginner fit: Poor unless guided or locally supported

Open Arctic Char profile
Catfish, whitefish, and winter species

Catfish, whitefish, and winter species species profiles

Updated profile

Channel Catfish Fishing in Canada

Large rivers, reservoirs, warm lakes, current edges, deep holes, and night-feeding flats

Beginner fit: Good where access, bait rules, and handling tools are sorted first

Open Channel Catfish profile
Updated profile

Burbot Fishing in Canada

Cold lakes, deep basins, rocky flats, river-connected lakes, and winter spawning areas

Beginner fit: Good for winter anglers who check local ice and burbot rules first

Open Burbot profile
Updated profile

Lake Whitefish Fishing in Canada

Cold clear lakes, deep flats, shoals, basin edges, and ice-fishing areas

Beginner fit: Moderate; light bites, depth control, and local rules matter

Open Lake Whitefish profile
Western trout and cold-water species

Western trout and cold-water species species profiles

Updated profile

Arctic Grayling Fishing in Canada

Cold northern rivers, clear streams, remote lakes, riffles, pools, and fly-fishing water

Beginner fit: Good with local guidance, poor where conservation rules are tight

Open Arctic Grayling profile
Updated profile

Cutthroat Trout Fishing in Canada

Cold mountain streams, alpine lakes, foothill rivers, clear pools, and western trout water

Beginner fit: Good in simple legal water, more sensitive in native or protected systems

Open Cutthroat Trout profile
Updated profile

Bull Trout Fishing in Canada

Cold mountain rivers, deep pools, connected lakes, glacial systems, and protected headwaters

Beginner fit: Poor as a harvest species; better as conservation-aware catch-and-release research where legal

Open Bull Trout profile
Updated profile

Kokanee Salmon Fishing in Canada

Interior lakes, reservoirs, stocked or managed kokanee waters, thermocline zones, and trolling paths

Beginner fit: Good with simple trolling plans and current lake rules

Open Kokanee Salmon profile
Pacific salmon

Pacific salmon species profiles

Updated profile

Sockeye Salmon Fishing in Canada

Pacific coastal waters, Fraser-style systems, large rivers, lakes, and migration routes

Beginner fit: Poor without current openings, local guidance, and species identification

Open Sockeye Salmon profile
Updated profile

Pink Salmon Fishing in Canada

Pacific beaches, river mouths, estuaries, lower rivers, and odd-year or local run contexts

Beginner fit: Good for simple salmon plans only after current area rules are confirmed

Open Pink Salmon profile
Updated profile

Chum Salmon Fishing in Canada

Pacific estuaries, lower rivers, side channels, tidal edges, and migration routes

Beginner fit: Moderate only with current rules and careful fish identification

Open Chum Salmon profile
Coastal and anadromous species

Coastal and anadromous species species profiles

Updated profile

Striped Bass Fishing in Canada

Estuaries, tidal rivers, beaches, river mouths, coastal flats, and managed Atlantic systems

Beginner fit: Good only after current area, season, and retention rules are confirmed

Open Striped Bass profile
Updated profile

Pacific Halibut Fishing in Canada

British Columbia tidal waters, offshore structure, sand or gravel bottoms, banks, shelves, and guided saltwater areas

Beginner fit: Good with a licensed guide or charter, poor as an unguided first saltwater target

Open Pacific Halibut profile
Species Planning Table

Match the fish to the first planning move

SpeciesBest first moveRule check
WalleyeLakes, reservoirs, rivers, current edges, and ice-fishing basinsWalleye rules often include size windows, slot limits, possession limits, sanctuary closures, and zone-specific seasons. Never assume one Ontario, Manitoba, Alberta, or Saskatchewan lake follows the same rule as the next.
Northern PikeWeedy bays, rivers, shallow flats, lake mouths, and cold northern lakesPike rules can include size-protection limits, harvest windows, live-bait restrictions, and special management water. Big pike handling should prioritize fast release and safe tools.
Smallmouth BassClear lakes, rocky rivers, shoals, points, current, and island edgesBass seasons and catch-and-release rules can be sensitive around spawning. Always check the province, zone, date, and waterbody before targeting or photographing bass.
Largemouth BassWeeds, docks, lily pads, wood, warm bays, and soft-bottom lakesBass closures, live-release rules, and tournament handling requirements can vary. Do not target bedding fish unless the exact local rules allow it.
Lake TroutCold deep lakes, northern shield lakes, large reservoirs, and ice-fishing basinsLake trout often have sensitive stocking, natural reproduction, slot, sanctuary, and depth-related release concerns. Check the exact lake, not only the province.
Brook TroutCold streams, spring-fed ponds, remote lakes, beaver ponds, and northern riversBrook trout can have special lake-specific limits, bait bans, catch-and-release rules, and protected strain waters. Check rules before keeping fish.
Rainbow Trout and SteelheadStocked lakes, cold rivers, tailwaters, Great Lakes tributaries, and coastal streamsSteelhead and tributary fisheries can have tight seasonal, sanctuary, bait, hook, and retention rules. Confirm the waterbody and date before fishing.
Brown TroutCold rivers, Great Lakes tributaries, stocked lakes, tailwaters, and spring creeksBrown trout can share aggregate trout limits, tributary rules, sanctuary closures, and gear restrictions with other salmonids. Check exact water and date.
Yellow PerchWeed edges, flats, bays, shoals, basins, docks, and ice-fishing areasPerch can have generous limits in some waters and stricter rules in others. Check possession limits, bait rules, and waterbody exceptions before keeping fish.
CrappieWeedy bays, docks, brush, basins, marina edges, and spring spawning areasCrappie can have specific panfish limits, possession rules, and local exceptions. Confirm whether the water has black crappie, white crappie, or other panfish rules.
MuskieLarge lakes, weed edges, rock points, rivers, current breaks, and basin-adjacent structureMuskie are often managed for trophy potential with strict seasons and size limits. Handling, release, and legal opening dates matter as much as lure choice.
Atlantic SalmonAtlantic rivers, cold pools, runs, estuaries, and managed salmon watersAtlantic salmon rules can change by river, region, conservation status, hook type, retention, and season. Official DFO/provincial updates control the final answer.
Chinook SalmonPacific coastal waters, Great Lakes systems, large rivers, tributaries, and staging areasChinook can involve DFO openings, area notices, freshwater rules, tags, hatchery/wild distinctions, and retention limits. Verify the exact area and date.
Coho SalmonPacific coastal water, Great Lakes systems, river mouths, tributaries, and nearshore staging areasCoho retention, hatchery/wild identification, area openings, and freshwater rules can change quickly. Verify the official source before fishing.
Arctic CharNorthern rivers, Arctic lakes, coastal routes, and cold remote systemsNorthern char fisheries can involve community rules, territorial regulations, special licences, outfitter guidance, and conservation limits. Confirm locally before travel.
Channel CatfishLarge rivers, reservoirs, warm lakes, current edges, deep holes, and night-feeding flatsCatfish rules can include bait restrictions, possession limits, waterbody exceptions, and special river rules. Verify the exact province, water, date, bait, and harvest rule before keeping fish.
BurbotCold lakes, deep basins, rocky flats, river-connected lakes, and winter spawning areasBurbot can have local possession rules, winter-specific access concerns, bait rules, and waterbody exceptions. Safe ice and official rules both need checking before a trip.
Lake WhitefishCold clear lakes, deep flats, shoals, basin edges, and ice-fishing areasWhitefish rules can vary by waterbody, aggregate limits, commercial or Indigenous context, and winter access. Verify the exact lake and official rule source before keeping fish.
Arctic GraylingCold northern rivers, clear streams, remote lakes, riffles, pools, and fly-fishing waterGrayling can be conservation-sensitive, especially in parts of Alberta and managed waters. Confirm current official rules, closures, and catch-and-release requirements before fishing.
Cutthroat TroutCold mountain streams, alpine lakes, foothill rivers, clear pools, and western trout waterCutthroat trout can be tied to native-strain protection, bait bans, catch-and-release rules, and sensitive stream closures. Verify the exact water before fishing.
Bull TroutCold mountain rivers, deep pools, connected lakes, glacial systems, and protected headwatersBull trout are highly regulation-sensitive and may be catch-and-release, closed, or protected depending on jurisdiction and waterbody. Do not target or handle them without current official confirmation.
Kokanee SalmonInterior lakes, reservoirs, stocked or managed kokanee waters, thermocline zones, and trolling pathsKokanee rules can vary by stocked or wild context, lake, season, gear, and tributary protection. Confirm the exact water and current official rules.
Sockeye SalmonPacific coastal waters, Fraser-style systems, large rivers, lakes, and migration routesSockeye salmon opportunities can change quickly by area, stock, date, method, and retention status. Official DFO notices control the final answer.
Pink SalmonPacific beaches, river mouths, estuaries, lower rivers, and odd-year or local run contextsPink salmon rules can change by area, date, method, retention, and freshwater or tidal context. Official DFO rules decide the final plan.
Chum SalmonPacific estuaries, lower rivers, side channels, tidal edges, and migration routesChum salmon rules can be area-specific and conservation-sensitive. Verify species, area, date, method, and retention status through official DFO sources.
Striped BassEstuaries, tidal rivers, beaches, river mouths, coastal flats, and managed Atlantic systemsStriped bass are managed closely in some Atlantic contexts. Check current season, size, retention, gear, area, and closure rules before targeting or keeping fish.
Pacific HalibutBritish Columbia tidal waters, offshore structure, sand or gravel bottoms, banks, shelves, and guided saltwater areasPacific halibut rules are highly specific and can involve area, date, size, possession, annual limits, in-season notices, and DFO management. Do not rely on old limits or lodge marketing.
Official Sources

Where to verify fish species and rules

Species profiles are planning support. Official federal, provincial, territorial, park, and local sources control seasons, limits, closures, licence products, and protected waters.

Official source

DFO aquatic species browser

Federal species browser for Canadian aquatic species, habitat descriptions, and conservation context.

Open source
Official source

DFO recreational fishing regulations

Federal entry point for recreational fishing rules, especially marine, salmon, and coastal fisheries.

Open source
Official source

Ontario Fishing Regulations Summary

Province-level example of why zone, waterbody, species, and date rules must be checked before fishing.

Open source
Official source

Alberta game fish species

Official Alberta game-fish species index with descriptions for many freshwater sport fish.

Open source