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Bluegill vs Great Hammerhead Shark

Lepomis macrochirus verglichen mit Sphyrna mokarran

Taxonomy & Classification

Eigenschaft Bluegill Great Hammerhead Shark
Wissenschaftlicher Name Lepomis macrochirus Sphyrna mokarran
Ordnung Centrarchiformes Carcharhiniformes
Familie Centrarchidae Sphyrnidae
Conservation Status Least Concern Critically Endangered

Physical Traits

Eigenschaft Bluegill Great Hammerhead Shark
Maximale Länge 41,0 cm 610,0 cm
Maximales Gewicht 2,2 kg 580,0 kg
Färbung Olive-green to dark bluish-green back with 6–8 darker vertical bars; deep blue-purple iridescent opercular flap; breast and belly range from yellow to bright orange; no spots on the soft dorsal fin. Brownish-gray to olive-gray dorsal surface with a clean countershaded white belly; no distinct patterning; first dorsal fin is tall and strongly falcate; pelvic fin tips dusky.

Habitat & Environment

Eigenschaft Bluegill Great Hammerhead Shark
Wassertyp Freshwater Saltwater
Tiefenbereich 1-300m
Verbreitungsgebiet Native to the eastern and central United States from the Great Lakes basin south to the Gulf Coast and Florida. Inhabits weedy lake margins, ponds, … Circumtropical in warm coastal and offshore waters of the Atlantic, Indian, and Pacific oceans. Concentrates around coral reefs, continental shelf edges, and deep-water drop-offs; population …
Lebensraum Estuaries Neritic

Angelinformationen

Eigenschaft Bluegill Great Hammerhead Shark
Sportfisch Ja Nein
Kampfbewertung 3/10
Weltrekord
Quecksilbergehalt

Cuisine & Edibility

Bluegill

Mild, sweet white flesh with fine texture and very low fat; one of America's most popular panfish for the table. Ideal pan-fried whole with cornmeal crust or deep-fried in strips.

Great Hammerhead Shark

Critically Endangered — consumption strongly discouraged. Fins are historically traded but the species faces severe population decline; eating this fish is ecologically irresponsible.

Species Overview

Bluegill

The bluegill is the most common sunfish in North America and often the first fish a young angler catches. Its deep body, dark ear flap, and iridescent blue-green colors make it easy to identify. A fierce predator of insects despite its small size.

Great Hammerhead Shark

The great hammerhead is the largest of the nine hammerhead shark species. Its distinctive cephalofoil (hammer-shaped head) houses an array of electroreceptors that allow it to detect stingrays buried beneath the sand.

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