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Black Crappie vs Electric Eel

Pomoxis nigromaculatus comparado com Electrophorus electricus

Taxonomy & Classification

Atributo Black Crappie Electric Eel
Nome Científico Pomoxis nigromaculatus Electrophorus electricus
Ordem Centrarchiformes Gymnotiformes
Família Centrarchidae Gymnotidae
Conservation Status Least Concern Least Concern

Physical Traits

Atributo Black Crappie Electric Eel
Comprimento Máximo 49,0 cm 250,0 cm
Peso Máximo 2,7 kg 20,0 kg
Cor Silver-green to olive-gray body heavily speckled with irregular dark black-green spots scattered randomly without forming vertical bars; dorsal and anal fins spotted; belly is silvery-white. 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.

Habitat & Environment

Atributo Black Crappie Electric Eel
Tipo de Água Freshwater Freshwater
Faixa de Profundidade 0-?m
Distribuição Geográfica Native to freshwater lakes, ponds, and slow rivers of the eastern United States and southern Canada from the Great Lakes to Texas. Found in weedy … 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 …
Habitat Estuaries Estuaries

Informações de Pesca

Atributo Black Crappie Electric Eel
Peixe Esportivo Sim Não
Classificação de Resistência 3/10
Recorde Mundial
Nível de Mercúrio

Cuisine & Edibility

Black Crappie

Sweet, tender white flesh with fine flakes and very low fat; considered among the best-tasting panfish. Delicious pan-fried with light seasoning or battered and deep-fried.

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.

Species Overview

Black Crappie

The black crappie is a popular panfish found throughout North American lakes and reservoirs. Known for its delicate, sweet-tasting flesh, it is most actively caught during spring spawning when it moves to shallow water near cover.

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.

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