Peacock Bass vs Requin baleine
Cichla temensis comparé à Rhincodon typus
Taxonomy & Classification
| Attribut | Peacock Bass | Requin baleine |
|---|---|---|
| Nom scientifique | Cichla temensis | Rhincodon typus |
| Ordre | Cichliformes | Orectolobiformes |
| Famille | Cichlidae | Rhincodontidae |
| Conservation Status | Least Concern | Endangered |
Physical Traits
| Attribut | Peacock Bass | Requin baleine |
|---|---|---|
| Longueur maximale | 100,0 cm | 1800,0 cm |
| Poids maximum | 12,7 kg | 21500,0 kg |
| Couleur | Golden-yellow to olive-green body with three bold dark vertical bars on the flanks; a striking black ocellus edged in gold at the tail base; breeding males develop a prominent nuchal hump. | 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
| Attribut | Peacock Bass | Requin baleine |
|---|---|---|
| Type d'eau | Freshwater | Saltwater |
| Plage de profondeur | — | 0-1928m |
| Aire de répartition | Native to the Amazon River basin and Orinoco River system in South America, including Venezuela, Colombia, and Brazil. Inhabits blackwater rivers, flooded forests, and large … | 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 … |
| Habitat | Native to Southeast Asian rivers including the Mekong basin. Warm, slow-moving freshwater with soft substrates. Introduced to tropical aquaculture systems globally. Tolerates wide temperature range … | Neritic, coral reefs |
Informations sur la pêche
| Attribut | Peacock Bass | Requin baleine |
|---|---|---|
| Poisson de pêche sportive | Oui | Non |
| Cote de combativité | 9/10 | — |
| Record du monde | — | — |
| Teneur en mercure | — | — |
Cuisine & Edibility
Peacock Bass
Firm, white flesh with a clean, mild flavor and low fat content. Prized table fish throughout Amazonian cuisines; excellent grilled, pan-fried, or steamed with citrus.
Requin baleine
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
Peacock Bass
The peacock bass is the crown jewel of Amazon basin sport fishing. Despite its name, it is actually a large cichlid. Known for explosive topwater strikes and powerful, drag-screaming runs in tropical rivers and lagoons.
Requin baleine
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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