California Fish Species

Threespine Stickleback

  • Scientific Name
    Gasterosteus aculeatus
  • Native
    Native Species
  • Identification

    Threespine stickleback (armored), in Toro Creek, San Luis Obispo County, CA, on 30 April 2006. Note: spines are folded back because fish are swimming into the current. Photo by Steve Howard.
    Threespine stickleback (armored), in Toro Creek, San Luis Obispo County, CA, on 30 April 2006. Note: spines are folded back because fish are swimming into the current. Photo by Steve Howard.

    Threespine stickleback (armored). Location: Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta. Date: 16 April 2011. Photo by Christopher Mosser, UC Davis.
    Threespine stickleback (armored). Location: Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta. Date: 16 April 2011. Photo by Christopher Mosser, UC Davis.

    Threespine stickleback (armored), captured in rotary screw trap on Sacramento River at Knight's Landing. Date: 10/19/2009. Photo by Kasie Barnes, California Department of Fish and Game. Note: Measurement scale is in millimetres.
    Threespine stickleback (armored), captured in rotary screw trap on Sacramento River at Knight's Landing. Date: 10/19/2009. Photo by Kasie Barnes, California Department of Fish and Game. Note: Measurement scale is in millimetres.

    Threespine stickleback, unarmored. Captured from San Antonio Creek (Vandenberg Air Force Base) in 2008. Photo by Carl Page, ARS Consulting.
    Threespine stickleback, unarmored. Captured from San Antonio Creek (Vandenberg Air Force Base) in 2008. Photo by Carl Page, ARS Consulting.

    • Small: Inland sticklebacks 3-5 cm TL, anadromous sticklebacks may exceed 8 cm TL
    • Laterally compressed body, narrow caudal peduncle
    • 3 sharp spines in front of dorsal fin, bony plates (armor) along side (1-35)
    • Terminal mouth slanting upward, large eyes
    • 1 pelvic spine/1 pelvic ray, 10-24 dorsal fin rays, 6-10 anal fin rays, 9-11 pectoral fin rays
    • Adults olive to dark green on back and sides, white underside, colorless fins
    • Breeding males usually have red underside, blue sides, iridescent blue or green eyes
    • Breeding females usually have silver underside with green-brown back, often larger in size

     

  • Life History

    The threespine stickleback has a unique characteristic of developing distinctive forms based upon geography and physical conditions. Several forms may exist within a single stream or drainage. Typically the amount of armor is representative of the predatory threat, and stickleback bodies vary from fully plated to unarmored. The stickleback may have a resident freshwater or anadromous life history, though this fish is capable of completing its entire life cycle in fresh or saltwater. Within a stream the threespine stickleback prefers shallow slow water along the edge with varying substrates. They prefer areas with adequate cover in the form of aquatic plants or overhanging brush to protect them from predators like birds and piscivorous fish. In addition sticklebacks need clear water for nest building and food foraging. These fish require cool water for long term survival, in the range of 23-24°C. Good salinity tolerance has allowed them to inhabit estuaries or saltwater environments, sometimes living as far as 800 km offshore. Sticklebacks usually form loose schools or shoals, and individuals as well as groups form specific feeding habits. Freshwater populations feed mostly on organisms living on the bottom or amongst aquatic vegetation, whereas anadromous forms feed more on free-swimming organisms. Most sticklebacks complete their life cycle in one year, though it is possible for them to live 2 or 3 years. Breeding occurs in late spring to summer in freshwater. Anadromous forms typically breed earlier in the season after moving up into a stream. The males dig and prepare nests, which may be filled with 50-300 eggs by the females. Each female lays eggs in several nests, which are then covered and guarded by the males for the 6-8 day incubation period. Predation on eggs is not uncommon, and sticklebacks may prey upon other adjacent nests. The fry remain in the nest for several days, and upon emerging are guarded in a shoal by the male. As the fry grow and develop they will eventually leave the male to join a shoal with fish of their own size.

  • Links to Other Research
    N / A
  • Watershed
    • Alisal-Elkhorn Sloughs Watershed
    • Aliso-San Onofre Watershed
    • Antelope-Fremont Valleys Watershed
    • Big-Navarro-Garcia Watershed
    • Bodega Bay Watershed
    • Calleguas Watershed
    • Carmel Watershed
    • Central Coastal Watershed
    • Chetco Watershed
    • Cottonwood Tijuana Watershed
    • Coyote Watershed
    • Cuyama Watershed
    • Los Angeles Watershed
    • Lower American Watershed
    • Lower Butte
    • Lower Cache Watershed
    • Lower Calaveras-Mormon Slough Watershed
    • Lower Cosumnes-Lower Mokelumne Watershed
    • Lower Cottonwood Watershed
    • Lower Eel Watershed
    • Lower Feather Watershed
    • Lower Klamath Watershed
    • Lower Sacramento Watershed
    • Mad-Redwood Watershed
    • Mattole Watershed
    • Middle San Joaquin-Lower Chowchilla Watershed
    • Middle San Joaquin-Lower Merced-Lower Stanislaus Watershed
    • Mill Watershed
    • Mojave Watershed
    • Mono Lake Watershed
    • Newport Bay Watershed
    • Owens Lake Watershed
    • Pajaro Watershed
    • Russian Watershed
    • Sacramento-Lower Cow-Lower Clear Watershed
    • Sacramento-Lower Thomes Watershed
    • Sacramento-Stone Corral Watershed
    • Salinas Watershed
    • Salmon Watershed
    • Salton Sea Watershed
    • San Antonio Watershed
    • San Diego Watershed
    • San Francisco Bay Watershed
    • San Francisco Coastal South Watershed
    • San Gabriel Watershed
    • San Jacinto Watershed
    • San Joaquin Delta Watershed
    • San Lorenzo-Soquel Watershed
    • San Luis Rey-Escondido Watershed
    • San Pablo Bay Watershed
    • Santa Ana Watershed
    • Santa Barbara Coastal Watershed
    • Santa Clara Watershed
    • Santa Margarita Watershed
    • Santa Maria Watershed
    • Santa Monica Bay Watershed
    • Santa Ynez Watershed
    • Seal Beach Watershed
    • Smith Watershed
    • South Fork Eel Watershed
    • South Fork Trinity Watershed
    • Southern Mojave Watershed
    • Suisun Bay Watershed
    • Tomales-Drake Bays Watershed
    • Trinity Watershed
    • Tulare-Buena Vista Lakes Watershed
    • Upper Chowchilla-Upper Fresno Watershed
    • Upper Dry Watershed
    • Upper Eel Watershed
    • Upper King Watershed
    • Upper Putah Watershed
    • Upper San Joaquin Watershed
    • Ventura Watershed

Please note, watersheds are at the USGS 8-digit Hydrologic Unit Code (HUC) scale, so they often include a lot of sub-watersheds.  If a species occurs in any sub-watershed within the HUC, the species appears within the HUC.  Link to an EPA page that shows HUCs.