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-   -   Man catches 200 year old fish (https://www.subsim.com/radioroom/showthread.php?t=205542)

garren 07-02-13 08:41 PM

Man catches 200 year old fish
 
This fish is older than the state of Alaska. It was already 50 years old during the US civil war. Holy crap! :o

http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/sideshow...135438367.html

Only to end up mounted on a wall in 2013... :nope:

Oh well.

It's Obama's fault.

Red October1984 07-02-13 08:51 PM

I'm having trouble believing this... :hmmm:

Incredible if it's true. :o

Stealhead 07-02-13 11:26 PM

It is very possible many animals have the potential to live long life spans especially certain species of fish.So it is very possible.
I know that several species of Sturgeon can live over 100 years.Larger Tuna like Bluefin average about 50 years.

BossMark 07-03-13 02:02 AM

Bet it goes nice with some chips (fries) :haha:

Jimbuna 07-03-13 05:44 AM

They make a lovely looking pair :)

STEED 07-03-13 08:08 AM

Daily wail

Man dies of fish poisoning after eating 200 year old fish.

Ducimus 07-03-13 12:50 PM

Looks like a gigantic Rockcod. Notice how the eyes are bulged out? That's not how they normally look. Rock fish are bottom feeders and are WAY DOWN. Like 200 to 400 feet or so, give or take. They decompress when you reel them in, and are dead by the time you get them to the surface. The ones I used to fish for, their eyes would pop out of the heads, and their air sacks would be protruding out their mouth because of the decompression. With rock fish, their's no such thing as catch and release. You reel them in, and that's pretty much the end of them.

I used to do alot of ocean fishing with my dad growing up.

vienna 07-03-13 01:16 PM

So, 200 years old...

Was it gumming at the bait?...

<O>

Oberon 07-03-13 01:53 PM

I had to look at the first part of Ducimus's post twice..... :oops:

Red October1984 07-03-13 02:36 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Oberon (Post 2079053)
I had to look at the first part of Ducimus's post twice..... :oops:

:rotfl2: Me too.

AVGWarhawk 07-03-13 02:40 PM

How do we know for sure? Can we cut him open and count the rings? :hmmm:

Jimbuna 07-03-13 03:27 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by AVGWarhawk (Post 2079094)
How do we know for sure? Can we cut him open and count the rings? :hmmm:

Count the scales...then weigh it on them :hmm2:

vienna 07-03-13 03:31 PM

Ask to see its AARP Card...

<O>

Stealhead 07-03-13 03:34 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Ducimus (Post 2079030)
Looks like a gigantic Rockcod. Notice how the eyes are bulged out? That's not how they normally look. Rock fish are bottom feeders and are WAY DOWN. Like 200 to 400 feet or so, give or take. They decompress when you reel them in, and are dead by the time you get them to the surface. The ones I used to fish for, their eyes would pop out of the heads, and their air sacks would be protruding out their mouth because of the decompression. With rock fish, their's no such thing as catch and release. You reel them in, and that's pretty much the end of them.

I used to do alot of ocean fishing with my dad growing up.


True in deed any deep dwelling fish that has a swim bladder is going to die when it gets reeled in.The swim bladder just expands until it pops.I have seen Snapper come up with the swim bladder sticking out of their mouths.

Now a shark or a skate or any other more primitive fish they do not have the swim bladder getting reeled in from the deep just annoys them.

I always thought that concept of catch and release was bogus when you are bagging a deep dwelling fish with a swim bladder it dies either way.

TarJak 07-04-13 12:21 AM

Sounds fishy to me.


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