Photos: The Amazing Sunfish in Bali

July 24, 2008 by admin 



The sunfish is the largest and most fertile bony fish in the world. It is also the wierdest looking fish you’re ever likely to see.

Some sharks (such as the whale shark and great white) can grow larger, but these are cartilaginous fish, rather than bony fish. Sunfish can produce massive numbers of eggs: one female caught off Florida was carrying 300 million eggs. This makes the cane toad look quite modest, producing a mere 60,000 eggs per clutch.



Sunfish tend to lie on their side close to the surface of the ocean, appearing to bask in the warmth of the sun, say researchers at the Large Pelagic Research Lab at the University of New Hampshire. They may be ‘thermally recharging’ after diving to depths where their bodies have been significantly cooled by the deep water.

From ABC Australia: Read more



Comments

3 Responses to “Photos: The Amazing Sunfish in Bali”

  1. Patric Douglas on July 24th, 2008 8:37 pm

    I had no idea these critters were found in Bali. We have them in spades off the California and Mexico coast. Nice shooting!

  2. shurford on July 27th, 2008 6:14 pm

    Hey Patric, thanks for the comment – wish I could claim the shot but I lifted it out of the Sydney Morning Herald.

    Link: http://blogs.smh.com.au/science/archives/2007/03/one_tonne_sun_fish.html

    Apparently it was 1.5 tonnes….

    Haven’t been out to California filming yet but plan to as soon as I get my hands on a Red Scarlet 3k camera – may well look you guys up when I do!

    Keep one eye on the Blue ;o)

    Laterz

  3. Domingo on September 9th, 2008 7:33 pm

    They are quite common where I come from in the Caribbean too.

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