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Channel Catfish vs Common Snook

Ictalurus punctatus verglichen mit Centropomus undecimalis

Taxonomy & Classification

Eigenschaft Channel Catfish Common Snook
Wissenschaftlicher Name Ictalurus punctatus Centropomus undecimalis
Ordnung Siluriformes Perciformes
Familie Ictaluridae Centrachidae
Conservation Status Least Concern Least Concern

Physical Traits

Eigenschaft Channel Catfish Common Snook
Maximale Länge 132,0 cm 140,0 cm
Maximales Gewicht 26,0 kg 24,3 kg
Färbung Blue-gray to olive-gray back with silvery-white sides; scattered small black spots on the flanks in juveniles that fade with age; belly creamy-white; deeply forked tail fin is uniformly grayish. Pale golden-olive to grayish-brown back with silvery flanks; a bold black lateral stripe runs from the operculum to the tail; belly pale yellow-white; fins are yellowish with a dusky posterior dorsal fin.

Habitat & Environment

Eigenschaft Channel Catfish Common Snook
Wassertyp Freshwater Freshwater & Saltwater
Tiefenbereich 0-15m ?-22m
Verbreitungsgebiet Native to the central and eastern United States and southern Canada, from the Great Lakes south through the Mississippi River basin to the Gulf Coast. … Western Atlantic from South Carolina south through the Gulf of Mexico, entire Caribbean, and along the Atlantic and Pacific coasts of Central America to Brazil. …
Lebensraum Estuaries Neritic, estuaries

Angelinformationen

Eigenschaft Channel Catfish Common Snook
Sportfisch Ja Ja
Kampfbewertung 5/10 8/10
Weltrekord
Quecksilbergehalt

Cuisine & Edibility

Channel Catfish

Firm, moist white flesh with a mild, sweet flavor and very low fat. A Southern U.S. staple — beloved deep-fried with cornmeal batter; also excellent grilled or blackened.

Common Snook

Sweet, firm white flesh with a mild, clean flavor; low fat and large flakes. Highly regarded as table fare in Florida and the Caribbean; excellent grilled, blackened, or pan-seared.

Species Overview

Channel Catfish

The channel catfish is the most abundant and widely fished catfish species in North America. It has a keen sense of smell, with taste buds distributed across its entire body, enabling it to locate food in murky water.

Common Snook

The common snook is a prized inshore game fish found in tropical western Atlantic waters. It is highly sensitive to cold water and cannot survive temperatures below 12 degrees Celsius. Its lateral line is distinctive — a bold black stripe.

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