View allAll Photos Tagged flathead
University of Montana alumni enjoy a two-hour cruise on Flathead Lake hosted by the Alumni Associaion on July 25, 2024, near Lakeside, Montana.
David Rauls, a Fort Sill, Okla. civilian employee, holds a flathead catfish he caught March 20, 2012 at Lake Lawtonka. He caught the monster fish that tipped the scales at 50 pounds and reached 42.5 inches long on a bait casting combo with 14-pound fish line. It took him 35 minutes to land the fish. (Courtesy photo)
About 15 miles south of Kalispell, Flathead Lake is the largest natural lake west of the Mississippi and one of my favorite places. This is another of my musings under the heading "what if I won the lottery".
A nice flathead catfish that my friend caught while fishing off the boat with me.
You have permission to you this photo as long as its not for commercial use and you provide a visible link to www.ohiorivercatfishing.com
Middle Fork Flathead River. The slight turquois color of the water is due to glacial till. 20 July, 2011.
魚群, Fish school,
ボラ, Flathead Gray Mullet,
川奈港, Port KAWANA,
東伊豆, East IZU,
20220718
. #canon #izu #Snorkeling
CANON EOS M6 Mark II
CANON EF-M11-22mm F4-5.6 IS STM
Seafrogs 40m/130ft Sea Frogs Underwater Camera Housing
Seafrogs 6" Dry Dome Port
INON 水中ストロボ D-2000 Type4 ×2
EpoqueWorld 水中ライト EL-1000 A105
TAXONOMY
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum:Chordata
Class: Actinopterygii (ray-finned fishes)
Order: Scorpaeniformes (Scorpionfishes and flatheads)
Family: Scorpaenidae (Scorpionfishes or rockfishes)
Genus/species: Sebastapistes cyanostigma
GENERAL CHARACTERISTICS: large head, relatively smooth skin,spotted, usually yellow and white on a pinkish red background. No dark bars on underside of head. Common length : 6.4 cm or 2.5 inches.
DISTRIBUTION/HABITAT:Tropical, Indo-Pacific. Typically found among the branches of Pocillopora corals in surge areas of seaward reefs. Also observed between the branches of the fire coral.
Diet: Crustaceans and small fishes.
Remarks: A master of camouflage, this small fish hide among corals, changing colors to match its background. A viewer of the Fire Coral Tank where this little fish resides may look directly at the fish and still not see it. A true scorpionfish, it uses the sharp venomous spines on its back for protection.
Venoms Cluster
*Not currently on exhibit 2-1-16