Barred Sand Bass

Ken Jones

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Sea Basses— Family Serranidae — Barred Sand Bass

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Barred Sand Bass from the Oceanside Pier

Species: Paralabrax nebulifer (Girard, 1854); from the Greek words para (near) and labrax (a European bass), and the Latin words nebul (smoke or dark) and fer (to bear), in reference to the color on their sides.

Alternate Names: Commonly called sand bass; sandy, grumps or grumpy (large fish), ground bass, rock bass, sugar bass or Johnny Verde bass. Also given the unflattering names of pussgut and turd roller. In Mexico it’s called cabrilla de arena.

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Barred Sand Bass from the Dana Harbor

Identification: Easily differentiated from kelp bass by the coloring and the shape of the dorsal fin. The dorsal fin is long and continuous, with a notch between the spiny and soft ray portions but not as deep as on kelp bass; the third spine of the dorsal fin is much longer than the fourth and twice as long as the second. The color is generally dark gray to greenish on the back, with faint bars on the sides, and a whitish-colored belly. There are usually small golden-brown spots on the cheeks. A 10-inch albino sand bass was landed in July of 1965 from the Sportfishing boat Palomar while fishing eight miles northwest of Oceanside, and one mile offshore from the San Onofre power plant. Just two weeks earlier, and just a quarter mile from that spot, a similar-colored, 12-inch albino sand bass had been caught from the Sportfishing boat Sea Lure. The first fish is now a resident of the Los Angeles County Museum of Natural History; the second fish was not saved.

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Barred Sand Bass from the Embarcadero Marina Pier in San Diego

Size: Length to 25.6 inches and weight to 14 pounds. Most caught from piers are less than 12 inches long (although a 12-pound fish was reported from the Shelter Island Pier in February of 1997). The California angling record and IGFA World Record fish weighed 13 lb. 3 oz. and was taken at the Huntington Flats in 1988. The diving record fish was 12 Lbs. 12 oz. for a fish taken in Long Beach in 2004.

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Barred Sand Bass from the Redondo Sportfishing Pier

Range: Acapulco, Southern Mexico (perhaps), La Paz, Gulf of California, Todos Santos, southern Baja California, to Santa Cruz, central California. Common from Bahia Magdalena, southern Baja California, to the Santa Barbara Channel and Point Conception, California.

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Barred Sand Bass from the San Clemente Pier

Habitat: Usually found around sandy areas near kelp or around rocks near the bottom. Concentrated in waters 15-85 feet deep but recorded to a depth of 600 feet.

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Barred Sand Bass from the Hermosa Beach Pier

Piers: Best bets: Ferry Landing Pier, Embarcadero Marina Park Pier, Shelter Island Pier, Imperial Beach Pier, Oceanside Harbor Pier, Dana Harbor Pier, San Clemente Pier, Seal Beach Pier, Belmont Pier, Long Beach Finger Piers, and Hermosa Beach Pier.

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Barred Sand Bass from the Ocean Beach Pier

Shoreline: A common catch for shore anglers in southern California.

Boats: One of the main species for boaters in southern California, especially during spring spawning times.

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Barred Sand Bass from the Ocean Beach Pier
Bait and Tackle: Another opportunistic feeder grabbing just about anything that moves. The smaller fish that hang around piers (generally under 12 inches) focus in on mysids (tiny shrimp-imitating critters), crabs, worms, clams, and small fish. All in all it’s probably a healthier diet than that experienced by young pier anglers—corn dogs, French fries, soda pop and “Flamin’ Hot” Cheetos. Adult sandies, much like adult humans (sure), eat a more refined gourmet diet focusing in on fish, octopi and crabs. Like kelpies and spotties, the sand bass is usually caught on the bottom with light tackle. Best bait is live anchovies or smelt followed by strip bait, ghost shrimp, bloodworms, or fresh mussels. They'll often hit artificial lures like swimbaits.

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OB Pier Rat (Mike) and a Barred Sand Bass from the Ferry Landing Pier

Food Value: If you are lucky enough to land a keeper-size fish you will have a good meal. Barred sand bass have a mild-flavored meat suitable to almost any kind of cooking. They can be used as fillets, baked whole, or cut into smaller pieces for deep-frying.

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OB Pier Rat and a Barred Sand Bass from the Oceanside Pier

Comments: Sand bass are a seasonal catch (primarily May through October) and when available may be caught in good numbers. Adults spawn during the summer; young appear inshore during fall and winter.