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Electric Eel vs Tarpon argenté

Electrophorus electricus comparé à Megalops atlanticus

Taxonomy & Classification

Attribut Electric Eel Tarpon argenté
Nom scientifique Electrophorus electricus Megalops atlanticus
Ordre Gymnotiformes Elopomorpha
Famille Gymnotidae Megalopidae
Conservation Status Least Concern Vulnerable

Physical Traits

Attribut Electric Eel Tarpon argenté
Longueur maximale 250,0 cm 250,0 cm
Poids maximum 20,0 kg 161,0 kg
Couleur Dark olive-gray to grayish-brown cylinder-shaped body with a pale yellowish-orange throat and chin; back uniformly dark; scaleless skin has a smooth appearance; long ribbon-like anal fin is pinkish. Brilliant chrome-silver flanks with large, plate-like reflective scales producing a mirror-like sheen; back is dark blue-green; fins clear to dusky with elongated dorsal ray.

Habitat & Environment

Attribut Electric Eel Tarpon argenté
Type d'eau Freshwater Freshwater & Saltwater
Plage de profondeur 0-40m
Aire de répartition Native to the Orinoco and Amazon river basins in Venezuela, Guyana, Suriname, and Brazil. Inhabits murky, oxygen-depleted floodplain pools, swamps, and slow-moving streams in lowland … Western and eastern Atlantic from Virginia south through the Caribbean Sea, Gulf of Mexico, and along the South American coast to Brazil; also West Africa. …
Habitat Estuaries Coral reefs, estuaries

Informations sur la pêche

Attribut Electric Eel Tarpon argenté
Poisson de pêche sportive Non Oui
Cote de combativité 10/10
Record du monde
Teneur en mercure

Cuisine & Edibility

Electric Eel

Not consumed — an ornamental and scientific novelty species kept in specialized aquarium exhibits; edible in principle but extremely dangerous to handle due to powerful electric discharge.

Tarpon argenté

Bony flesh with a strong, somewhat coarse texture; rarely eaten in modern sport fishing. Primarily catch-and-release; not commonly consumed due to bones and Vulnerable status.

Species Overview

Electric Eel

Despite its name, the electric eel is not a true eel but a knifefish. It can generate electrical discharges of up to 860 volts to stun prey and defend itself. About 80% of its body is dedicated to three electric organs.

Tarpon argenté

The tarpon is often called the 'Silver King' for its large mirror-like scales and acrobatic leaps. This ancient species has existed for over 100 million years and can breathe air using a modified swim bladder.

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