What you're looking at
The European bass (Dicentrarchus labrax) is the most-targeted UK saltwater sport fish — sleek silver flanks, a green-grey back, and two distinct dorsal fins. A summer-to-autumn predator that hunts in surf, estuaries, harbours and over rocky ground.
Key features
- Body: Streamlined, slightly compressed, deeper at the shoulder than a mullet.
- Dorsal fins: Two distinct dorsals — the front one spiny (eight or nine sharp rays), the back one soft. They're separate, not joined like wrasse.
- Gill cover: A dark spot on the upper-rear edge of the gill cover ("operculum spot") — a reliable bass marker. The leading edge has two flat backward-facing spines that can cut handlers, hence the Latin name.
- Mouth: Big, terminal, slightly underslung — clearly a predator's mouth.
- Markings: Bright silver flanks fading to white belly, dark olive-grey to bluish-grey back. Juveniles often show faint vertical bars.
- Size: "Schoolies" 0.5–1.5 kg in shoals; 2–3 kg ("kerbside bass") common; 4 kg+ ("schoolie" graduates) are specimen-class; UK record over 8 kg.
Confusion species
- Grey mullet: Smaller mouth, blunt head, more cigar-shaped body, no spiny dorsal. The two are often hooked from the same marks.
- Pollack: Three dorsal fins (gadoid), not two — and the body's more elongated. Brassy/olive rather than silver.
- Gilthead bream: Deeper body, gold "saddle" between the eyes, single continuous dorsal.
Where to find them
Surf beaches in a south-westerly blow, rocky gullies, estuary mouths, harbour walls, and pier ends. Most active from May to November in UK waters; the south-west and southern England fish through milder winters. Bass hunt sand-eels, prawns, crabs and small mackerel; a moving live or lure-imitated bait around feature is the standard approach. Note: bass are subject to UK minimum landing size and bag-limit regulations that change yearly — check current rules before keeping any fish.