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Wahoo

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Wahoo: Acanthocybium solanderi
Appearance:
A member of the mackerel family, long and streamlined with about 30 dark wavy bars for camouflage.

 


Wahoos tend to be solitary or occur in loose-knit groups of two or three fish, rather than in schools. Their diet consists essentially of other fish and squid.

Acanthocybium solandri, Wahoo
Acentronura australe, Southern Little Pipehorse
Acropora cervicornis, Staghorn Coral
Acropora palmata, Elkhorn Coral
Aeoliscus strigatus, Razorfish
Aethaloperca rogaa, Redmouth Grouper
Agaricia agaricites, Lettuce Coral ...

Wahoo, Acanthocybium solandri
Waitangi Day
Waitangi Day and the Australian Museum
Waitangi Day Dancer - piu piu 4
Waitangi Day Dancers
Waitangi Day Dancers
Waitangi Day Dancers - making a pukana
Waitangi Day Dancers - piu piu ...

Vocalizations made by yellow baboons include a two-phase bark, or "wahoo" call, which adult males direct toward feline predators or toward other males. It is thought to communicate the presence of the male and his arousal.

Their principal use is as bait for offshore species such as king mackerel, spanish mackerel and wahoo. Where To Catch Cutlassfish are sold as live bait for offshore fishing. How To Eat Cutlassfish are not used as a food fish in the U. S.

Winged Elm
Ulmus alata (scientific)
Ulmus alata Michx., the Winged Elm or Wahoo, is a small- to medium-sized deciduous tree endemic to the southern and south-central United States.

from "non-dolphin-safe" fishing techniques to the most widely employed alternative costs the lives of 25,824 small tuna (these are discarded, not kept and utilized), 27 sharks and rays, 382 mahi mahi (also known as "dolphin fish"), 188 wahoo, ...

been able to find a list of catch statistics, or estimates of numbers of fish, here is a list of the types of fish that sports fishermen are interested in catching, in approximate order of size:
Black Marlin
Blue Marlin
Sailfish
Mackerel
Tuna
Wahoo ...

Other species are the king mackerel, also called kingfish and cero (up to 60 lb/27 kg); the chub mackerel, similar to the Atlantic mackerel; and the cosmopolitan and more solitary wahoo, or peto.

See also: Shrimp, Squid, Angler, Tuna, Zebra