View allAll Photos Tagged LiveFishing
- When Live Fish are being delivered to the local ponds, in various places around the city of Phoenix -
A live video, if you like to see Flying Fish, Park Place,AZ. -
Naples Botanical Gardens
Southwest Florida
USA
The boat-tailed grackle (Quiscalus major) is a passerine bird of the family Icteridae found as a permanent resident on the coasts of the Southeastern United States.
The boat-tailed grackle is found in coastal saltwater marshes and, in Florida, also on inland waters. Boat-tailed grackles have established significant populations in several United States Gulf Coast cities and towns, where they can be found foraging in trash bins, dumpsters, and parking lots.
The nest is a well-concealed cup in trees or shrubs near water; three to five eggs are laid.
They forage on the ground, in shallow water, or in shrubs; they will steal food from other birds. They are omnivorous, eating insects, minnows, frogs, eggs, berries, seeds, grain, and even small birds.
Its song is a harsh jeeb, and it has a variety of typically grackle-like chatters and squeaks.
Naples Botanical Gardens
Southwest Florida
USA
The boat-tailed grackle (Quiscalus major) is a passerine bird of the family Icteridae found as a permanent resident on the coasts of the Southeastern United States.
The boat-tailed grackle is found in coastal saltwater marshes and, in Florida, also on inland waters. Boat-tailed grackles have established significant populations in several United States Gulf Coast cities and towns, where they can be found foraging in trash bins, dumpsters, and parking lots.
The nest is a well-concealed cup in trees or shrubs near water; three to five eggs are laid.
They forage on the ground, in shallow water, or in shrubs; they will steal food from other birds. They are omnivorous, eating insects, minnows, frogs, eggs, berries, seeds, grain, and even small birds.
Its song is a harsh jeeb, and it has a variety of typically grackle-like chatters and squeaks.
Naples Botanical Gardens
Southwest Florida
USA
The fish crow (Corvus ossifragus) is a species of crow associated with wetland habitats in the eastern and southeastern United States. Fish crows can be identified from other crows because they hunch down and fluff their throat feathers when they call.
The call of the fish crow has been described as a nasal "ark-ark-ark" or a begging "waw-waw".
This species occurs on the eastern seaboard of the United States from Rhode Island south to Key West, and west along the northern coastline of the Gulf of Mexico and follows many river systems inland for quite some distance. Coastal marshes and beaches, rivers, inland lakes and marshes, river banks, and the land immediately surrounding all are frequented.
Food is taken mainly from the ground or shallow water where the bird hovers and plucks food items out of the water with its feet. The fish crow is omnivorous. It feeds on small crustaceans, such as crabs and shrimps, other invertebrates, stranded fish, and live fish if the situation favors their capture, eggs and nestlings of birds, small reptiles, the fruits of many trees, peanuts, and grains, as well as human scraps where available.
The nest is usually built high in a tree and is often accompanied in nearby trees with other nests of the same species forming small, loose colonies. Usually, four or five eggs are laid. Pale blue-green in color, they bear blotches of olive-brown.
Naples Botanical Gardens
Southwest Florida
USA
The boat-tailed grackle (Quiscalus major) is a passerine bird of the family Icteridae found as a permanent resident on the coasts of the Southeastern United States.
The boat-tailed grackle is found in coastal saltwater marshes and, in Florida, also on inland waters. Boat-tailed grackles have established significant populations in several United States Gulf Coast cities and towns, where they can be found foraging in trash bins, dumpsters, and parking lots.
The nest is a well-concealed cup in trees or shrubs near water; three to five eggs are laid.
They forage on the ground, in shallow water, or in shrubs; they will steal food from other birds. They are omnivorous, eating insects, minnows, frogs, eggs, berries, seeds, grain, and even small birds.
Its song is a harsh jeeb, and it has a variety of typically grackle-like chatters and squeaks.
A Northern Pike kept alive on a stinger in the water. I like to photograph my fish after catching one, so I put it on a stinger in the water,until I can go get my camera.I take a shot and then release it back into the water,if I'm not going to eat it.
Wolcott, Marion Post,, 1910-1990,, photographer.
A store with live fish for sale, vicinity of Natchitoches, La.
1940 July
1 slide : color.
Notes:
Title from FSA or OWI agency caption.
Photograph shows Sign on pole: Live cat fish; sign to left of door: Live fish for sale here; sign at far left: Fish for sale.
Transfer from U.S. Office of War Information, 1944.
Subjects:
Food
Advertisements
African Americans--Commerce
United States--Louisiana--Natchitoches
Format: Slides--Color
Rights Info: No known restrictions on publication.
Repository: Library of Congress, Prints and Photographs Division, Washington, D.C. 20540 USA, hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/pp.print
Part Of: Farm Security Administration - Office of War Information Collection 11671-7 (DLC) 93845501
General information about the FSA/OWI Color Photographs is available at hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/pp.fsac
Higher resolution image is available (Persistent URL): hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/fsac.1a34367
Call Number: LC-USF35-135
Photo © Tristan Savatier - All Rights Reserved - License this photo on Getty Images
Share this photo on: facebook • twitter • more...
Klingon gagh? No, just live river eels on the market (Lang Sơn, Vietnam)
This really looks like Gagh, the famous Klingon delicacy in the StarTrek TV series. Best eaten fresh and alive!
I just noticed that all the eels plunge their head down, so all you see are bodies and tails, no heads! I like the bubbles, too...
Scale: about 60 cm (2 feet) from left to right.
If you like this photo, follow me on instagram (tristan_sf) and don't hesitate to leave a comment or email me.
It's spring, and American Shad are running from the Chesapeake Bay into the Susquehanna River tributary and straight into ... dam! The Conowingo dam to be precise. Into the fish lift and up over the dam to continue their spawning run in the waters where they were born. But Wait! The shad have unwanted company in their lift...Northern Snakeheads!!! Voracious fish from Asia--Russia, China and Korea. So the shad got a different kind of lift after the fish lift was shut down at the dam to try to keep the snakeheads out of the Susquehanna River.
Here, a load of American Shad got a lift to Columbia, (Lancaster County) Pennsylvania, and now they can continue their spawning journey from here.
.
.
2023 0416 006 010
© All rights are reserved, please do not use my photos without my permission
Name: Inter Caledonia
Flag:Norwegian
GRT:2900
Length:69,8 m
Width:17m
Well Vol:2210m3
Speed:12Knts
Type:Livefish carrier
Design:ST550
Built :2015
The vessel is a single screw propelled vessel, designed with low resistance hull to achieve low fuel oil consumption during transport. ST-550 is a new well boat concept featuring: • Two separately arranged fish tanks. • Closed loop circulation • Vacuum loading and unloading • Pressure loading and unloading • ST-550 are equipped with fish handling system from Cflow and WQ treatment and monitoring system from Redox AS
Pak sou gong or 白鬚公 or 'white whiskered grandpa' catfish. One of the best fish dishes I've eaten and despite being a freshwater fish, it didn't taste at all muddy or earthy. The fish belly or blubber was creamy, rich and memorable. 52 RM or £8.14
Pak sou gong or 白鬚公 or 'white whiskered grandpa' catfish. One of the best fish dishes I've eaten and despite being a freshwater fish, it didn't taste at all muddy or earthy. The fish belly or blubber was creamy, rich and memorable. 52 RM or £8.14
Pak sou gong or 白鬚公 or 'white whiskered grandpa' catfish. One of the best fish dishes I've eaten and despite being a freshwater fish, it didn't taste at all muddy or earthy. The fish belly or blubber was creamy, rich and memorable. 52 RM or £8.14
A final look at the Bahamas Sawshark as we move on. He didn't budge all the ten minutes I'd spent there. It would have been nice if he had begun swimming again for it would have been nice to get a different view of him. This is a harmless shark, from the perspective of humans that is (shrimps and tiny fish might beg to differ!). Little is know about the Bahamas Sawshark due to it's relative geographic isolation and also because it seems to prefer deeper waters. Detailed notes about this animal appear in previous captions. (Toronto, Canada, Nov.2015)
The high voltage electric eels were safely inside a tank, thank goodness. This is in the Ripley's Aquarium of Canada. While details about their 'electric' portion appeared in previous captions, here are some more details about electric eels: they live in the murky streams and ponds of the Amazon and Orinoco basins of South America, feeding mainly on fish, but also amphibians and even birds and small mammals. As air-breathers, they must come to the surface frequently. They also have poor eyesight, but can emit a low-level charge, less than 10 volts, which they use like radar to navigate and locate prey.
Electric eels can reach huge proportions, exceeding 8 feet in length and 20 kilograms in weight. They have long, cylindrical bodies and flattened heads and are generally dark green or grayish on top with yellowish coloring underneath. Despite their fearsome reputation for electrocution, human deaths from electric eels are extremely rare. However, multiple shocks can cause respiratory or heart failure, and people have been known to drown in shallow water after a stunning jolt.(Toronto, Canada, Nov.2015)
Photo © Tristan Savatier - All Rights Reserved - License this photo on www.loupiote.com/537997416
Share this photo on: facebook • twitter • more...
Goldfish in Fishbowl over man's head.
Ali is a French street performer and juggler (Pompidou Center, Paris, France)
If you like this photo, follow me on instagram (tristan_sf) and don't hesitate to leave a comment or email me.
Signage for the Atlantic Grayling. The actual fish looked much smaller and quite different from what is portrayed here. For notes and pictures of the actual fish, see next caption. (Toronto, Canada, Nov.2015)
The brilliant black and white White-blotched River Stingray which which shared the tank with the S. American Freshwater Stingray. (see previous picture). These White-blotched stingrays can supposedly give birth to as many as twelve puts at one time- cheaper by the dozen it is, right? The Xingu River ray, white-blotched river stingray, or polka-dot stingray, Potamotrygon leopoldi, is a species of fish in the Potamotrygonidae family endemic to Brazil. Its natural habitat is rivers. It is threatened by habitat loss. River stingrays are the only family of batoids completely restricted to fresh water habitats. (Toronto, Canada, Nov.2015)