Great Barracuda(Sphyraena barracuda)

Quick Facts

  • Size Range: The barracuda can grow to over 100 pounds.
  • Native Species?: Yes
  • Food Value: Fair, but has been known to carry ciguatera poisoning.

State Record

  • Louisiana State Record: 50lbs
  • State Record Date: 8/1/1970
  • State Record Holder A.C. Mills

The barracuda is a distinctive fish with a greyish/green back and silver sides with black spots and a white belly. A long slender fish, the barracuda’s teeth are its most prominent feature. They use their mouth full of large teeth to slash a fish to pieces upon impact. They can bite a much larger fish in half, eating them in large chunks. They have a very sharp sense of smell as well.

Offshore structures and inshore flats are both home to the barracuda. They are not a shy fish and sometimes act curious to swimmers and boats. They can hang motionless, until they’re ready to strike prey, springing forward with one of the fastest reaction times in nature.

Live bait, trolling and flashy lures will take barracuda. Wire leader is essential, and they love a lure that is retrieved very quickly. They will often jump when hooked and put up a great fight on appropriate tackle. Anglers must take care in handling them as their sharp teeth can cause serious injury. Even dead barracuda cut people as they try to get a look at the famous mouth full of teeth.

Related Habitats:
Other Reef Fish Species: Mahogany Snapper Banded Rudderfish Wenchman Snapper Blackfin Snapper Nassau Grouper Goliath Grouper Yellowfin Grouper Red Snapper

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Related Fishing Methods

Bottom fishing is normally about fishing bottom structures in order to target benthic or bottom dwelling fish. There are a wide variety of techniques, but the common element is the targeting of species who dwell around or hide in natural and man-made structures. Fish like grouper, snapper, amberjack and catfish would be considered bottom fish. It is very popular amongst anglers and success is often determined by the fishermen's ability to crank a fish away from the structure before the fish can duck into it and cut the line. Anchoring or drifting the boat over the structure is key to having success. There are many versions, and many of the bottom fish are prized eating.

Drift fishing can encompass a variety of fishing methods. Bottom fishing over structure is often done while drifting. Timing the drop of your baits as you pass by the structures below is the trick. Also knowing when you have drifted beyond the fish is a key element to being succesful. Anglers also drift while live bait fishing and chunking for bluewater pelagic fish like tuna. The use of live bait or chunks is a slower presentation where the fish are drawn to the boat by smell or vibration of live fish. Inshore you can drift along while casting for trout and redfish with baits or lures. One of the main benefits of drift fishing is that you can quietly cover ground while searching for feeding fish.

A versatile method of fishing for many types of fish in both freshwater and salt. A jig is a lure, normally a lead-headed lure with many various types of body/tail configurations made of rubber, hair and feather. Jigs are one of the most versatile of all lures and can be tipped with bait or not. Traditionally jigs are worked in variety of up and down motions, and can be fished throughout the entire water column, depending on the fishery. A modern form of jigs called metal jigs has taken hold and many varieties and shapes have been developed to work different ways. Made famous by the Shimano Butterfly Jig and now produced by many companies in many variations. If I could only have one lure to fish with it would be a jig.

Live bait is a term given to many different types of fish, crustaceans, insects and worms that are popular food items for fish and used by fishermen for bait. There are many benefits to live bait as well as a few cons. The pros normally out weigh the negatives, and live bait is widely used. The biggest benefit for fishermen is that they are using the real thing and often puts a fish's guard down. Small fish, crabs, shrimp, clams, crickets and the good ole earthworm are all used to entice a fish to the hook. The only negatives to live bait is just that, keeping it alive. Sometimes catching it can be a challenge, as only some species can be bought as live bait. No matter how you get it, live bait is a great way to target many types of fish.

The process of slowly searching the water and spotting fish, that you then present a bait too. Takes stealth and patience, but the visual reward is awesome. It is practiced on the flats for redfish as well as coastal areas for cobia and tripletail.

Trolling is the presentation of lure and/or baits from a moving boat. Many types of predatory fish are caught this way in both fresh and salt water. Speeds and presentations vary greatly depending on the target species. One may troll a small beetle spin for crappie with trolling motor in the lake, or charge around oil rigs at 15 knots with a high-speed wahoo spread. Trolling ballyhoo offshore is one of the most common, broad spectrum ways to catch all types of gamefish. Again there are many different methods to choose from.

Vertical jigging popular and growing trend of using a variety of metal jigs and high speed reels to quickly drop and retrieve the jig making it dance or flutter through the water column. It is deadly on a wide variety of fish. Both bottom fish and pelagics are fooled into biting these versatile jigs.