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Caribbean Tropical Fish 4-04-10

Caribbean Tropical Fish 4-04-10. Four-eyed Fish, Anableps. Trinidad November 2009 Photo by Eliana Ardila. Anableps skim the surface and their eyes see above and below. Queen Angelfish. French Angelfish. Gray Angelfish. Rock Beauty. Barracuda.

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Caribbean Tropical Fish 4-04-10

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  1. Caribbean Tropical Fish4-04-10

  2. Four-eyed Fish, Anableps Trinidad November 2009 Photo by Eliana Ardila

  3. Anableps skim the surface and their eyes see above and below.

  4. Queen Angelfish

  5. French Angelfish

  6. Gray Angelfish

  7. Rock Beauty

  8. Barracuda

  9. Jack the Ripper, the five foot welcome committee at Blue Hole.

  10. Jack the Ripper under our boat at Blue Hole.

  11. Revenge! Dinner!

  12. Mallory Blakeslee and her ‘Cudda 2005

  13. Mike Joines & his ‘Cuddas By Harold Baquet

  14. Blackcap Basslet

  15. Fairy Basslet

  16. Batfish, a species we see while snorkeling in the mangroves of Turneffe Atoll.

  17. Spotted Burrfish

  18. Web Burrfish

  19. Spiney Puffer from Natural History Magazine

  20. A spiney little ball. from Natural History Magazine

  21. How do they puff up? It’s the stomach. From Natural History Magazine

  22. Bandtail Puffer

  23. Toadfish

  24. Scorpionfish, with poison glands, cryptically resting in Tobago.

  25. Banded Butterflyfish

  26. Foureyed Butterflyfish

  27. Spotfin Butterflyfish

  28. Cyanae

  29. Blue Chromis

  30. Brown Chromis

  31. Coney: yellow phase (l) & bicolor phase (r)

  32. Chub

  33. Chub under the boat at The Aquarium, a favorite dive site on Long Caye, Belize.

  34. Barjack

  35. Melissa Kaintz (02) with an edible barjack.

  36. Jack Crevelle

  37. Horse-eye Jack – note the large eye

  38. King Mackerel – called a King Fish in Belize.

  39. Patty Richards (02) with her King Fish.

  40. We’ll have a good meal soon!

  41. Spanish Mackerel

  42. Wahoo are another relative of the King Fish.

  43. Fish have a lateral line for sensing the environment, and the shape of the line is often used to identify fish.

  44. Yellowfin Tuna, one of the fastest fishes in the sea.

  45. Fast moving fish (a King Mackerel in this case) often have very red, highly vascularized tissue near the center of the body.

  46. High Speed Tails

  47. Gill Rakers in Bonita

  48. Bicolor Damselfish adult

  49. Bicolor Damselfish juvenile

  50. Cocoa Damselfish

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