The bronze-coloured bream can be seen gathering in large shoals in lowland ponds, lakes and slow-flowing rivers. It is a member of the carp family and looks similar to the dace, chub and rudd.
Scientific name
Abramis brama
When to see
January to December
Top facts
Stats
Length: 30-40cm
Weight: up to 4.5kg
Average Lifespan: 15-20 years
The bream is a medium-sized fish and a member of the carp family, so displays the typical carp shape. It is a bottom-feeding fish that preys on worms, snails and pea mussels. It lives in large ponds, lakes and slow-moving rivers where it congregates in quite large shoals.
What to look for
The bream is a deep-bodied fish, with a high back and flattened sides. It is bronze in colour, with dark brown fins and a deeply forked tail. Juveniles are silvery in colour.
Where to find
Widespread in lowland England, but rarer in Wales and Scotland.
Did you know?
In areas where bream and other fish spawn together, the bream frequently hybridises with its close relative the Roach.