Northern kingfish

Monday, August 20, 2012

Mystery Fish Continues-Three Weeks Now

Enclosed are photographs of a fish that has eluded both identification and capture by myself and many others over the past few weeks. This includes evasion from our most successful local hunting group- the 6-8 year olders.

It is located in a small tidepool at the northern end of 3rd Beach in Middletown and the fish is not even an inch long.

I have submitted the photos to the North American Native Fish Association and hopefully someone there may have an idea.

In the photos, I have included both the regular shots and the blurrier close-ups.

Naturally any insights are most appreciated.

Banded drum perhaps?















Also two habitat shots.











.

Thursday, August 9, 2012

Visit by RI Dept Environmental Management


Recently, down at the Crabtown (north) end of the beach, a mystery fish has been eluding both capture and identification. I have been after it now for eight days. Yesterday, I went in early to the beach to give myself a pre-crowd, pre-wind, low tide chance at the fish. After almost an hour of futility, I gave up. As I was leaving, I heard a boat coming in fast through the mooring field, and the moment I saw it, I recognized it as the state’s Department of Environmental Management finfish survey boat. Last summer, I met up with them three times and they gave me fish for the aquarium.

Captained by J., the crew of four makes monthly surveys in the summer recording fish at a number of sampling stations located around Narragansett Bay. I grabbed my buckets and ran over to where they were about to set their 100-foot seine. It’s fascinating to watch and I was hopeful that they might net some goodies for the aquarium. I was able to take pictures of the operation.
RI DEM survey boat

Surveyer dropped off on beach with seine
The boat circles around

The four crew then pull the seine ashore

...and dump the fish into this bucket. That's a puffer blown up.




The bucket is brought onboard and each fish measured and identified

The measuring board.
On this day, their catch was correspondent with my recent seining. They caught many kingfish, killifish, menhaden, silversides; lesser amounts of puffers, sea robins, pipefish, flounder; and sadly, an expired inshore lizardfish.  I gratefully accepted a large windowpane, a large kingfish, a smaller winter flounder, and two medhaden that didn’t make it.   
Winter flouner

Menhaden



Sunday, August 5, 2012

100th Fish Species

Last Thursday, July 31, amongst other species, we seined scup at Third Beach. Seeing the scup marked the 100th species of fish I've seen for the year 2012. That was my goal, and I am surprised I reached this mark at such an early date. Credit should be given to my Tennessee trip in June because without having gone there, I would still be at about the 60-species mark.

Here is a picture I took of one of the three scup that we then put into the aquarium.