Saturday, June 22, 2013

Newport's Largest Electric Ray

My friend Nicole called me last night and told me to hoof down to the docks at the bottom of my street to check out this floating expired fish.



 

    About four feet long, and over 100-pounds, this was an Atlantic torpedo- Rhode Island's largest electric ray capable of delivering a charge of all of 220-volts.

Monday, June 10, 2013

Interesting Marine Animals a and Trip to Berlin, NH

The winter and early-spring are long gone. I spent the recent colder months investigating planktonic life down on the docks in Newport, RI. 
These were some of the bizarre creatures that I was able to see in only a few feet of water.  My largest hindrance is the poor camera work.


These are arrow worms- they have their own phylum Chaetognatha.



These two are of a Cumacean shrimp


These are American eel elvers. The eyes glowed in the dark. Friends in Maine made a lot on money off these animals this past spring- up to $1,500lb. They sell to the Chinese who grow them and sell them to the Japanese who eat them like we eat hot dogs.


Black-eyed hydromedusa

                  
                               Sea gooseberries. You can just make out the iridescence.
                                                             Lion's mane jellyfish

                                                           Isopod Idotea bathica
                                            
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As spring is radily turning into summer, my marine focus has changed from planktonic life to the operation of the aquarium on Third Beach that will open late-June. In the meantime, I did go far inland north to Berlin, New Hampshire; the state’s northernmost city. I climbed four mountains and explored along two river systems. Not much marine life, however along the Androscoggin and Dead Rivers, I did see five species of freshwater fish.
View overlooking Berlin, New Hampshire


Porcupine

Fuzzy image of  hungry bear. I didn't linger

Incredibly, it was 25-degrees Fahrenheit one morning and the Presidential Mountains had tons on snow on them.

Brook trout. Androscoggin River. The fishermen who caught these told me they were brown trout.

           
                                                                White sucker juvenile                                                               



Northern redbelly dace

                                                                   Blacknosed shiner

                                           
Bridled shiner
Water boatman