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Macabí vs Cornuda gigante

Albula vulpes comparado con Sphyrna mokarran

Taxonomy & Classification

Atributo Macabí Cornuda gigante
Nombre Científico Albula vulpes Sphyrna mokarran
Orden Albuliformes Carcharhiniformes
Familia Albulidae Sphyrnidae
Conservation Status Near Threatened Critically Endangered

Physical Traits

Atributo Macabí Cornuda gigante
Longitud Máxima 77,0 cm 610,0 cm
Peso Máximo 6,4 kg 580,0 kg
Color Highly iridescent silvery-white flanks with faint olive-green back; narrow dusky streaks follow scale rows along the upper body; fins are largely transparent with a pale yellowish tinge. 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

Atributo Macabí Cornuda gigante
Tipo de Agua Saltwater Saltwater
Rango de Profundidad 0-84m 1-300m
Distribución Geográfica Cosmopolitan in tropical and subtropical coastal waters of the Atlantic, Pacific, and Indian oceans. Favors shallow tidal flats, mangrove lagoons, and sandy bays in Florida, … 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 …
Hábitat Neritic, estuaries Neritic

Información de Pesca

Atributo Macabí Cornuda gigante
Pez de Pesca Deportiva No
Clasificación de Pelea 8/10
Récord Mundial
Nivel de Mercurio

Cuisine & Edibility

Macabí

Edible but extremely bony flesh; rarely consumed as table fare in modern sport fishing. Almost exclusively caught-and-released; the species is prized for its fighting ability, not flavor.

Cornuda gigante

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

Species Overview

Macabí

The bonefish is the premier shallow-water flats species, prized by fly fishers for its blistering initial run. Found in tropical shallows worldwide, it feeds by rooting in sand and marl for crustaceans and mollusks.

Cornuda gigante

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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