Macabí vs Tiburón ballena
Albula vulpes comparado con Rhincodon typus
Taxonomy & Classification
| Atributo | Macabí | Tiburón ballena |
|---|---|---|
| Nombre Científico | Albula vulpes | Rhincodon typus |
| Orden | Albuliformes | Orectolobiformes |
| Familia | Albulidae | Rhincodontidae |
| Conservation Status | Near Threatened | Endangered |
Physical Traits
| Atributo | Macabí | Tiburón ballena |
|---|---|---|
| Longitud Máxima | 77,0 cm | 1800,0 cm |
| Peso Máximo | 6,4 kg | 21500,0 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. | Dark gray to blue-gray back covered with a distinctive checkerboard grid of pale white or cream spots and transverse stripes; belly white; the unique spot pattern is unique to each individual. |
Habitat & Environment
| Atributo | Macabí | Tiburón ballena |
|---|---|---|
| Tipo de Agua | Saltwater | Saltwater |
| Rango de Profundidad | 0-84m | 0-1928m |
| 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, … | Pantropical in open oceanic and coastal waters between 30°N and 35°S. Aggregates seasonally at feeding sites including Ningaloo Reef in Western Australia, the Gulf of … |
| Hábitat | Neritic, estuaries | Neritic, coral reefs |
Información de Pesca
| Atributo | Macabí | Tiburón ballena |
|---|---|---|
| Pez de Pesca Deportiva | Sí | 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.
Tiburón ballena
Endangered species — consumption is strongly discouraged and illegal in many countries. Historically consumed in parts of Asia; now internationally protected under CITES Appendix II.
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.
Tiburón ballena
The whale shark is the largest living fish species, reaching lengths of up to 18 meters. Despite its enormous size, it is a gentle filter feeder that consumes plankton, fish eggs, and small fish by swimming with its wide mouth open.
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