River spawn guide.
Flowing rivers from small Driftless trout streams to the Mississippi River. Spawn habitat varies by river type.
Species that spawn in river
- Smallmouth BassAccess: high
Habitat: River smallmouth spawn on gravel shoals just below faster-moving riffles and runs.
Stream smallmouth on gravel are visible — fish below gravel transitions in pre-spawn.
- WalleyeAccess: high
Habitat: River walleye run into tributaries and concentrate below dam tailwaters during spawn.
The most productive walleye fishing of the year for many anglers.
- White BassAccess: high
Habitat: River white bass spawn upstream as far as they can swim — Wabash, Cumberland, Maumee runs are iconic.
Pre-spawn jigging at river mouths and tailwaters produces 50-fish days.
- Rainbow TroutAccess: moderate
Habitat: Wild stream rainbows spawn in gravel riffles. Hatchery strains stocked in put-and-take waters typically don't reproduce.
Wild populations are protected; redd damage is the main angler concern.
- Brown TroutAccess: moderate
Habitat: Wild stream browns spawn in gravel riffles in fall. Trophy fish are aggressive pre-spawn.
October trophy brown fishing is the iconic fall trout fishery.
- Flathead CatfishAccess: moderate
Habitat: River flatheads use deep cavity structure (log jams, undercut banks, root masses).
Trophy flathead fishing requires live bait and patience.
Example locations
- Driftless trout streams
- Catskill freestone rivers
- Mississippi River
- Susquehanna River
- Potomac River
- Western tailwaters