Spotted Stingray & A Wide Smile!
...:: Mizan dengan pari..parinya ::...
This site also answers the need of those who want to keep up to date on sports fishing.
Tip No 2 - Always try and get fresh bait. Catching it yourself can be fun too.
Tip No 3 - Use the lightest sinker you need for the job. Sometimes this will only be a very small one.
Tip No 4 - Become good at tying important knots. Get a good knot book, learn to tie the Locked Half Blood Knot and practice it.
Tip No 5 - Read as much as you can in magazines like Fishing World. There are heaps of really useful things as well as heaps of good pictures.
Tip No 6 - Never touch or handle a fish or creature that you can't identify. It might bite or sting.
Tip No 7 - Get a good fish identification book and study it.
Tip No 8 - Always wash salt off your fishing gear, including hooks and lures, after you've finished fishing at the coast.
Tip No 9 - Try and have a freshwater tackle box and a saltwater tackle box. This will protect your freshwater stuff from rust at the coast.
Tip No 10 - When you are not using your reels, keep them in a dark place, like a draw or cloth bag. Sunlight damages fishing line very quickly.
...:: Mizan dengan pari..parinya ::...
Posted by Kaki Joran at 1:22 AM
Labels:
stingray
0
comments
The bluespotted ribbontail ray, Taeniura lymma, is a stingray of the family Dasyatidae, found around coral reefs in the tropical Indo-West Pacific from the Red Sea and East Africa to the Solomon Islands north to southern Japan and south to northern Australia.
The bluespotted ribbontail ray is a colourful stingray with large bright blue spots on an oval, elongated disc and with blue longitudinal stripes on the tail. The snout is rounded and angular, the disc with broadly rounded outer corners, and stout tail, tapering and less than twice the body length when intact, with a broad lower caudal finfold reaching the tail tip. The disc has no large thorns but has small, flat denticles along the midback in adults. There is usually one medium-sized sting on the tail further back than in most stingrays.
It migrates in groups into shallow sandy areas during the rising tide to feed on molluscs, worms, shrimps, and crabs, dispersing on the falling tide to seek shelter in caves and under ledges. Rarely found buried under the sand. Small specimens are popular among marine aquarists, but it does not do well in aquaria.
Coloration is grey-brown to yellow, olive-green or reddish brown with large bright blue spots dorsally, white ventrally.
Reproduction is ovoviviparous.
Ovivoparous reproduction mean that the eggs are kept within the mother's body unitil they are ready to hatch or are about to hatch.
The only known predator of the bluespotted ribbontail ray is the hammerhead shark.
Posted by Kaki Joran at 6:01 PM
Labels:
blue spotted stingray,
pari,
stingray
0
comments