Chris and List:
I have not been able to see such numbers. In the red drum kept in earthen ponds and reservoirs here in Ecuador the most I could see is a big spot turn into a cluster of four to six smaller ones, but nothing more. I am enclosing a JPEG of the fish we used to have in CENAIM, one of them carries a little spot near the tail, the other ones lost it already. These fish were always kept in sea water (34-35 ppt), but that obviously does not make any difference.
Cheers.
Enrique
--- Enrique Blacio, B.Sc., M.Sc. Fish Culture Laboratory Fundación CENAIM-ESPOL www.cenaim.espol.edu.ec/~eblacio
--- Chris Guppenberger wrote:
> Enrique, > > I have observed the trait on several occasions in red drum in the Indian > River Lagoon, Banana River and Mosquito Lagoon in the wild here in Central > Florida. The spots on the tail are actually missing, and it was observed on > both male and female specimens. > > Interesting enough the local fish tournaments have geared their prizes to > red drum that have the greatest amount of spots. To include the mottled > black spots traveling up the dorsal side of the fish. Counts up to 112 have > been reported. > > Chris Guppenberger > Research Biologist > <((((< <((((< > <((((< > Visit us on the web! > http://www.floridafishresearch.com
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