Brown Trout Screenprint!!!
Over summer me and my partner spent a lot of time in Dartmoor and met some baby brown trout! (they really love corn).
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Brown Trout Screenprint!!!
Over summer me and my partner spent a lot of time in Dartmoor and met some baby brown trout! (they really love corn).

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
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Male sockeye salmon (Oncorhynchus nerka) in Adams River, British Columbia
Photos by Alex Mustard
Neoriceisgood's River and Lake fish.
My collection of river and lake friends! Have I done your fav?
So I'm watching river monsters and they're talking about alligator gar and how they have this terrifying reputation and like???
How????
IT LOOKS SO CONFUSED?? SO BEFUDDELLED??? SO BAMBOOZLED???
ah yes, the face of fear,
this fucking thing
SOCKEYE SALMON!!!!!!! THEY REALLY R WEIRD!!!!!!

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Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
sturgeon <3
behold
sunfish!
Pucker Up for the Sea Lamprey!
The sea lamprey (Petromyzon marinus), also known as the vampire fish, is the most famous member of the order of lampreys, Petromyzontiformes. Despite their similar appearance to eels, lampreys are actually jawless fish, and are more closely related to hagfish than eels. To add further confusion, sea lampreys actually reproduce in freshwater rivers and streams, and are only found in the ocean as adults. They are spread along the Atlantic coasts of North America and Europe, as well as the Mediterranean and Black Sea.
Sea lampreys are the largest member of the lamprey family, at an impressive 30 to 100 cm (11.8 to 39.4 in) long and weighing around 2.5 kg (5.5 lbs). They are generally olive or brownish grey, and their bodies are long and smooth. Perhaps P. marinus' most distinctive feature are their mouths, which are wide and circular with teeth arranged in a circle around the tongue and throat. When opened to attach to its prey, the mouth can stretch larger than the lamprey's head.
Vampire fish are widely known for their feeding habits. Adults are parasites that attach themselves to the sides of fish and feat on their victim's blood and tissue. But despite their fearsome appearance, P. marinus has a variety of predators as both juveniles and adults, including sturgeon, catfish, sea lions, seals, sea birds, and northern pikeminnows. Juveniles are particularly vulnerable, as they are smaller and, as deteriorates, are not equipped with the sharp teeth of adults.
Like many other fish, sea lampreys are anadromous, meaning they migrate from salt to freshwater to reproduce. From April to June, males and females travel up river to find rocky beds in which to build nests. Females lay anywhere from 30,000 and 100,000 eggs in their nest, which are then fertilized by multiple males. After mating, both parents die. The larvae take 3 to 8 days to hatch, and the young spend the next 1 to 3 years filter feeding in their home river. Once they reach maturity, they migrate back to the ocean, where they can reside for up to 5 years before returning to their spawning grounds to complete their lifecycle.
Conservation status: The IUCN has rated the sea lamprey as Least Concern. This species is invasive in the Great Lakes region of the United States. However, within its native range it is threatened by habitat degradation and over-fishing.
Photos
Paul Wilson
U.S. National Park Service
Sean Landsman