Friday, February 25, 2011

The Very Rare Long Nosed Gar Fish

The Gar Fish (Belone belone), or sea needle, is a pelagic, oceanodromous needle fish found in brackish and marine waters of the Eastern Atlantic, the Mediterranean Sea, the Baltic Sea, etc.

The fish lives close to the surface and has a migratory pattern similar to that of the mackerel, arriving a short time before the latter to spawn.

It is long and slender, sometimes 2 or 3 feet (0.91 m) in length. (See a Picture of Long Nosed Gar Fish)

From the North Sea, Garfish migrate to shallow waters in April and May. They spawn in areas with eel grass in May and June. In the autumn they return to the open sea, including the Atlantic west of the British Isles.

Garfish are pelagic, they feed on small fish and leap out of the water when hooked.

The garfish are oviparous and the eggs are often found attached to objects in the water by tendrils on the egg's surface.

Garfish have unusually green bones (due to biliverdin) which discourages many people from eating them, but the green color is harmless.

They are caught mainly in fixed nets along the coast in shallow waters.

Garfish - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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