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#1
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That looks like a fish I see alot along coastal Florida. It's common name
is "Porgy" and tier's several different kinds. This is one of the most common, perhaps even the most common. http://images.google.com/images?q=po...=Search+Images http://FloridaFishingInformation.com http://FloridaPhotoGallery.com "Musashi" wrote in message m... Gerres erythrourus Unfortunbately it is a fish native to Japam, Okinawa. How it could end up in Florida is beyond me. Here is a photo of a juvenile. Note the lip structure. http://fishpix.kahaku.go.jp/fishimag...PHOTO_ID_OPT=2 |
#2
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Maybe not.
The fish in the original post as well as the one in the answer from Japan have horizontal marking on the side. All the varieties of porgy that I could find show vertical markings. Also the mystery fish has prominent lips, almost like a sucker. None of the porgies shown in Vic Dunaway's "Sport Fish of Florida" have lips like this. Charlie "Texx Smith" wrote in message ... That looks like a fish I see alot along coastal Florida. It's common name is "Porgy" and tier's several different kinds. This is one of the most common, perhaps even the most common. http://images.google.com/images?q=po...=Search+Images http://FloridaFishingInformation.com http://FloridaPhotoGallery.com "Musashi" wrote in message m... Gerres erythrourus Unfortunbately it is a fish native to Japam, Okinawa. How it could end up in Florida is beyond me. Here is a photo of a juvenile. Note the lip structure. http://fishpix.kahaku.go.jp/fishimag...PHOTO_ID_OPT=2 |
#3
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I checked every porgy, grunt, snapper found in Florida, Gulf of Mexico and
Caribbean waters and found no species that matched the lip structure. All porgies found in the US have an upper lip fold that runs over the entire mouth or most of it. The mystery fish has a small lip fold that is only at the lower end of the mouth, a feature rather unusual for porgies, snappers, grunts etc. Additionally, the mystery fish also has pink rubbery lips, again unusual. Oddball sal****er specimems can end up in faraway places not only due to sal****er tropical fish enthusiasts dumping fish in local waters, but also in the ballast water of ocean going ships. M "Texx Smith" wrote in message ... That looks like a fish I see alot along coastal Florida. It's common name is "Porgy" and tier's several different kinds. This is one of the most common, perhaps even the most common. http://images.google.com/images?q=po...=Search+Images http://FloridaFishingInformation.com http://FloridaPhotoGallery.com "Musashi" wrote in message m... Gerres erythrourus Unfortunbately it is a fish native to Japam, Okinawa. How it could end up in Florida is beyond me. Here is a photo of a juvenile. Note the lip structure. http://fishpix.kahaku.go.jp/fishimag...PHOTO_ID_OPT=2 |
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