The American pickerels are two subspecies of Esox americanus, a species of freshwater fish in the pike family of order Esociformes: the redfin pickerel, E. americanus americanusGmelin, 1789, and the grass pickerel, E. americanus vermiculatusLesueur, 1846. Both subspecies are native to North America. They are not to be confused with their aggressive counterpart the Northern pike. The redfin pickerel's range extends from the Saint Lawrence drainage in Quebec down to the Gulf Coast, from Mississippi to Florida, while the grass pickerel's range is further west, extending from the Great Lakes Basin, from Ontario to Michigan, down to the western GulfCoast, from eastern Texas to Mississippi. The two subspecies are very similar, but the grass pickerel lacks the redfin's distinctive orange to red fin coloration, its fins having dark leading edges and amber to dusky coloration. In addition, the light areas between the dark bands are generally wider on the grass pickerel and narrower on the redfin pickerel. Record size Grass and Redfin Pickerels can weigh around 2 pounds and reach lengths of around 13 inches. Redfin and Grass Pickerels are typically smaller thanChain Pickerels which can be much larger. The redfin and grass pickerels occur primarily in sluggish, vegetated waters of pools, lakes, and swamps, and are carnivorous, feeding on smaller fish. Larger fishes, such as the striped bass, bowfin, and gray weakfish, in turn, prey on the pickerels when they venture into larger rivers or estuaries. These fishes reproduce by scattering spherical, sticky eggs in shallow, heavily vegetated waters. The eggs hatch in 11-15 days; the adults guardneither the eggs nor the young. The E. americanus subspecies are not as highly prized as a game fish as their larger cousins, the northern pike and muskellunge, but they are caught by anglers. McClane's Standard Fishing Encyclopedia describes ultralight tackle as a sporty if overlooked method to catch these small but voracious pikes. Lesueur originally classified the grass pickerel as E. vermiculatus, but it is now considered a subspecies of E. americanus. E. americanus americanus is sometimes called the brook pickerel. There is no widely accepted English common collective name for the two E. americanus subspecies; "American pickerel" is a translation of the systematic name and the Frenchbrochet d'Amérique.