Owen Caissie - Colorado Rockies at. Miami Marlins 03/29/26/
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Owen Caissie - Colorado Rockies at. Miami Marlins 03/29/26/
An Artist's Catch: Watercolors by Frank Stick (1884-1966). Edited by David Stick. Published in 1981.
Blue Marlin (Makaira nigricans)
Internet Archive
A blue marlin (Makaira sp.) leaps into the air mid-hunt off the coast of Costa Rica
by Leonardo Sanchez
"totally kyle 🥶" 👉 kyle stowers poses with his teammates after hitting a walk-off 2 run homer
This beauty here is a sailfish - a type of marlin, who holds the world record for the fastest marine animal!:0
They're split into two species, Indo-Pacific sailfish and Atlantic sailfish. An adult usually reaches around 3 meters (10 feet) long.
Despite their similarity to swordfish, sailfish are not related to them at all, although both of them have a rostrum - that long, sharp thing coming out of the upper jaw. A sailfish uses its rostrum to hunt down other fish!
Striped Marlin (Kajikia audax)
Family: Billfish Family (Istiophoridae)
IUCN Conservation Status: Least Concern
Like other members of the billfish family (named for their long, bony, beak-like snouts, which make their bodies streamlined and can be used to slash or impale small prey) Striped Marlins are large (reaching lengths of over 3m/10ft,) agile and extremely fast, reportedly reaching speeds of up to 50mph in short bursts. Typically found near the surface in open regions of the Pacific and Indian Oceans, members of this species use their speed, alongside their well-developed sense of sight and fast reflexes, to hunt large squids and smaller fish (especially those that gather in large schools, such as Australian Pilchards,) typically accelerating into schools of prey and flailing their bills in sharp horizontal slashes, wounding any suitably-sized animals in their path which they will then swallow whole. Though generally disinterested in other members of their species throughout most of the year Striped Marlins actively gather in large groups during the breeding season (which begins in the summer, during early November throughout much of their range,) with females releasing as many as 20 million tiny gelatinous eggs which males rush to externally fertilize. Fertilized eggs will hatch into tiny plankton-eating larvae, and while the vast majority of these larvae will not survive to adulthood those that do reach maturity (which occurs at around 2 years of age,) will face little predation as adults, serving as tertiary consumers (apex predators) in most food chains in which they appear. In parts of their range Striped Marlins are occasionally caught to be eaten, but they are more often hunted recreationally by those who regard them as a challenge owing to their speed and size; while recreationally hunted marlins are usually thrown back, injuries they receive during capture often leave them vulnerable to infection or unable to hunt. While Striped Marlin populations are believed to be declining, the species is not currently thought to be threatened.
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Image Source: Here
IG: mlb & ftwusatoday.com (5-3-23)