Facts: The Flying Gurnard
Вставка
- Опубліковано 24 бер 2022
- Quick facts about the flying gurnard, a colorful fish that can 'walk' along the seafloor. The flying gurnard (Dactylopterus volitans, helmet gurnard). Flying gurnard facts!
Support the channel on Kofi 😊 ko-fi.com/deepmarinescenes
Facebook: / deepmarinescenesofficial
TikTok: / deepmarinescenes
Podcast: open.spotify.com/show/6vnQgRY...
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
References and Helpful Links
www.tandfonline.com/doi/pdf/1...
www.iucnredlist.org/species/1...
dergipark.org.tr/en/download/...
www.scielo.br/j/ni/a/vmf4rSK9...
biogeodb.stri.si.edu/caribbea...
www.researchgate.net/profile/...
Fechhelm, Janice D., and McEachran, John D.. Fishes of the Gulf of Mexico, Volume 2: Scorpaeniformes to Tetraodontiformes. United States, University of Texas Press, 1998.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Music: Once Again by Bensound
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Images Licensed Under Creative Commons
By Encarna Sáez Goñalons & Víctor Martínez Moll CC BY-SA 3.0, commons.wikimedia.org/w/index...
By Waielbi - Own work, CC BY-SA 3.0, commons.wikimedia.org/w/index...
Videos Licensed Under Creative Commons
Encarna Sáez Goñalons & Víctor Martínez Moll, CC BY 3.0 creativecommons.org/licenses/..., via Wikimedia Commons
upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedi...
Arturo Borrero Gonzalez • Dactylopterus Volitans
Jim Zandlo • Flying Gurnard Bonaire...
• Bonaire 2014 Flying Gu...
Chris Taklis • Flying gurnand (Dactyl...
Joe Gallagher • Flying Gurnard
Used to have one as a pet. I called him “Flyin’ Brian”
Wow awesome fish. Those appendages that stir up the sand are like arms and hands. Thanks!
✅️ My þoughts 💯
he's cute 😍🤗
Amazing Fish
HERMOSO !💖 BELLO !💖 PRECIOSO !💖😍
The flying gurnard
Beautiful
please do the eastern rockhopper penguin for me
They actually croak when you catch them,well the red and grey gurnards we catch in the uk
Please do the ballan wrasse
So beautiful.
❤❤❤❤😮😮😮
Þank you for making such an informative and appealing video about ðe marvellous 🤩 helmet gurnard. Ðis is a 🐟 ðat on 2 legs "walks", wið its swim bladder "talks", wields "hands" to manipulate its environment, and has "wings" to "fly" in ðe water, effectively having 6 limbs. It's also protected by hard, scute-like scales. Ðe face is pretty. To me, it looks a bit like a gecko's. All in all, a very cool 🐠. I'm very þankful ðat at least ðis spellbinding living being seems to be (as of May 2023) not endangered. May it stay ðat way! Also þank you for giving links to ðose intrysting knowledge wellsprings 😃.
I wonder if on some level they are mimicking a ray or skate
This is a sea robin.
iirc it's just a different common name alternately used for some species under the order Syngnathiformes.
edit: typo
Actually, the flying gurnard belongs to the order Scorpaeniformes, which is a valid and monophyletic order, the order contains forty extant families, Trichodontidae (Sandfish), Normanichthyidae (Bacaladillo), Centrogenyidae (Prettyfin), Triglidae (Common Gurnards), Peristediidae (Armored Gurnards), Dactylopteridae (Flying Gurnards), Platycephalidae (True Flatheads), Hoplichthyidae (Ghost Flatheads), Bembridae (Deepwater Flatheads), Bathymastridae (Ronquils), Ptilichthyidae (Quillfish), Zaproridae (Goblin Goby), Scytalinidae (Graveldiver), Pholidae (Gunnels), Cryptacanthodidae (Wrymouths), Stichaeidae (Pricklebacks), Anarhichadidae (Wolf Blennies), Eulophiidae (Spinous Eelpouts), Zoarcidae (True Eelpouts), Liparidae (Snailfish), Cyclopteridae (Lumpsuckers), Zaniolepididae (Combfish), Anoplopomatidae (Blackcod), Hexagrammidae (Greenlings), Agonidae (Alligatorfish), Rhamphocottidae (Gruntfish), Bathylutichthyidae (Antarctic Sculpins), Ereuniidae (Deepwater Bullheads), Psychrolutidae (Blobfish), Comephoridae (Baikal Sculpins), Hemitripteridae (Sea Ravens), Cottidae (Common Sculpins), Aploactinidae (Velvetfish), Congiopodidae (Horsefish and Pigfish), Gnathanacanthidae (Toad Blenny), Pataecidae (Prowfish), Eschmeyeridae (Olfish), Sebastidae (Rockfish), Pteroidae (Lionfish, Stonefish, and Coral Crouchers), and Scorpaenidae (Scorpionfish), the order is further split into five suborders, Normanichthyoidei with the superfamilies Trichodontoidea (Sandfish and Fossil Relatives (contains 1 family: Trichodontidae)) and Normanichthyoidea (Bacaladillo and Prettyfin (contains 2 families: Normanichthyidae and Centrogenyidae)), Platycephaloidei with the superfamilies Trigloidea (Gurnards (contains 3 families: Triglidae, Peristediidae, and Dactylopteridae)) and Platycephaloidea (Flatheads (contains 3 families: Platycephalidae, Hoplichthyidae, and Bembridae)), Zoarcoidei with the superfamilies Bathymasteroidea (Ronquils and Quillfish (contains 2 families: Bathymasteridae and Ptilichthyidae)), Zaproroidea (Goblin Goby and Graveldiver (contains 2 families: Zaproridae and Scytalinidae)), Anarhichadoidea (Wolf Blennies, Pricklebacks, Wrymouths, and Gunnels (contains 4 families: Pholidae, Cryptacanthodidae, Stichaeidae, and Anarhichadidae)), and Zoarcoidea (Eelpouts (contains 2 families: Eulophiidae and Zoarcidae)), Cottoidei with the superfamilies Cyclopteroidea (Lumpsuckers and Snailfish (contains 2 families: Liparidae and Cyclopteridae)), Hexagrammoidea (Greenlings, Blackcod, and Combfish (contains 3 families: Zaniolepididae, Anoplopomatidae, and Hexagrammidae)), and Cottoidea (Sculpins (contains 8 families: Agonidae, Rhamphocottidae, Bathylutichthyidae, Ereuniidae, Psychrolutidae, Comephoridae, Hemitripteridae, and Cottidae)), and Scorpaenoidei with the superfamilies Congiopodoidea (Horsefish, Pigfish, and Velvetfish (contains 2 families: Aploactinidae and Congiopodidae)), Pataecoidea (Prowfish and Toad Blenny (contains 2 families: Gnathanacanthidae and Pataecidae)), and Scorpaenoidea (Scorpionfish, Lionfish, Stonefish, Coral Crouchers, Rockfish, and Olfish (contains 4 families: Eschmeyeridae, Sebastidae, Pteroidae, and Scorpaenidae)).
No, ðis really is a flying gurnard, also called "helmet gurnard". It walks on its hip fins ("legs") and scratches ðe seafloor wið ðe fore rays ("hands") of its shoulder fins ("arms"). Sea robins, also called "gurnards", are ðe ones ðat walk wið ðe fore rays ("fingers") of ðeir shoulder fins. Boþ are beautiful 😍 🤩.
what do they taste like?
Tastes good and its an expensive fish not a trash fish.Too beautiful to eat them thogh .
Try at speed × 1.5