wild salmon spawning
Posted on Oct 09, 2008 under atlantic fish | 1 Comment
Indiscriminate overfishing, pollution and hydro-electric dams, habitat destruction and man’s interference, are the salmon doomed?
Duration : 0:8:58
Indiscriminate overfishing, pollution and hydro-electric dams, habitat destruction and man’s interference, are the salmon doomed?
Duration : 0:8:58
I bought a bag of Atlantic Cod Loins and reading the Nutrition Facts label I found that it contains 50 mg of cholesterol/17%.
Are they talking about "good Cholesterol", or "bad one"?
Or maybe I picked the wrong fish!
Fish contains high values of Omega3, wichi is known as "good fat" because of its capability of maintaining the organism younger. No fish is wrong, you just may see the provenience…..
I'm Italian, nowadays fish could even came from China!! Can you believe it?!?
Marine angelfish are perciform fish of the family Pomacanthidae. They are found on shallow reefs in the tropical Atlantic, Indian, and mostly western Pacific oceans. The family contains seven genera and approximately 86 species
Duration : 0:1:32
We live in southwest florida and were at the beach, the gulf side, not the atlantic side. There was this huge school of fish that were jumping around for hours, they were smallish, pale blue, nearly see through with bright yellow tails. They're not damsel fish, I looked those up already. And the other creature we saw was a round, clear, contact shaped jellyfish like thing. It has no tentacles and is not poisonous. It has a white-ish membranous lining around the outer part but is otherwise completely clear. At the moment there are TONS of them drifting around the water. They have a mushroom shape, but its slight, more like a large, limp contact. If anyone has any idea what these critters are, or where I might be able to find out, I'd appreciate the help, I've done tons of research, but obviously, I'm not looking in the right places. Thanks in advance. (I know the pet fish section isn't quite accurate, but it was the only place that made any type of sense when posting this..)
I used to live down in the Cape Coral/Ft. Myers area. We used to see these fish jumping all the time in our canal, I was always told they were some kind of jack. Here's a link that has the different fish species, could also be a herring maybe? I just remember the jacks were always schooling and jumping, and you could tell when something was chasing them like a dolphin. But I don't know how big you're talking about, you mentioned damsels so I'm guessing they're small. Could also be some juvenile fish you were seeing. Where were you-on the beach, on a boat, was it a canal? You could probably email these guys at the link, I'm sure they'd know better what it was you saw, just let them know the details.
http://research.myfwc.com/gallery/view_category.asp?catid=1221&subcatid=5131&Page=1&MaxItems=27
And I think the other thing is a type of jellyfish. I remember seeing those drifting through the current down at Sanibel. They looked like mushroom caps, were round, and they didn't sting, the kids were catching and "playing" with them.
salmon inhaling dry fly and fighting like only they can beautiful leaping silver…I guide for these fish If you would like to fish here message me
Duration : 0:2:29
This is a 30 lb atlantic salmon cautch on the matapedia river in canada.
Duration : 0:4:32
Last summer I was deep sea fishing in the Atlantic ocean and I saw this cool looking fish swim by the boat. I looked at it and said "hello Mr. Fish" I am going back this summer. How can I see that same fish again? Not one that is similar but that very one.
go fishing again that ain't so hard only if u ask
on the Datmouth river in Quebec Gaspe region .
Duration : 0:4:56
I was looking at all the beautiful possibilities of a salt water aquarium and I'm very excited to learn more. I know with other fish, it's best to take them from the same part of the world i.e. South African with South African. Asian with Asian.
With many of the fish I am interested in, their origin is Indonesian, Asian, Atlantic, or Tongan. Can these be mixed or should the fish of an aquarium be based on origin?
Can you tell me more 'top-contributer' guys?
it would be best to buy all aqua cultured fish, to preserve wild stocks, but that can be a little unrealistic, as most fish aren't commercially farmed yet..
but in general keeping a certain thee to stocking leads to fewer problems, unless you pick animals that inhabit the same niches, like having a jawfish and a bogy in a smaller tank, or pick fish with predator/prey relations, a lionfish with smaller fish or shrimps…
assuming you keep fish of similar sizes and temerments you shouldn't really run into problems even if they are from opposite ends of the world…
some fish that are 'preferable' are red sea and hawaiian fish, they tend to show better colors and are generally more sought after…
and on a side note, do not trust someone solely on their top contributor badge.. that only signifies they post alot of answers… it has no bearing on the accuracy of them or the poster's knowlege of a subject
The Atlantic Spadefish is a very distinctive looking fish that is usually very large and easy to identify. Learn to identify Atlantic Spadefish with tips from a Caribbean scuba instructor in this free tropical fish identification video.
Duration : 0:1:50