crevalle jack, Caranx hippos Description At the entrance to the aquarium. New Jack Fishy... they swim, a lot.
Date 19 September 2009, 06:20 (UTC)
Source Crevalle_jack_aquarium.jpg https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Crevalle_jack_aquarium.jpg
Author Crevalle_jack_aquarium.jpg: Kevin Lawver from Sterling, US http://www.flickr.com/people/44124367235@N01
Source: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Crevalle_jack_aquarium-profile.jpg
The crevalle jack, Caranx hippos (also known as the common jack, black-tailed trevally, couvalli jack, black cavalli, jack crevale and yellow cavalli) is a common species of large marine fish classified within the jack family, Carangidae. The crevalle jack is distributed across the tropical and temperate waters of the Atlantic Ocean, ranging from Nova Scotia, Canada to Uruguay in the west Atlantic and Portugal to Angola in the east Atlantic, including the Mediterranean Sea. It is distinguishable from similar species by its deep body, fin colouration and a host of more detailed anatomical features, including fin ray and lateral line scale counts. It is one of the largest fish in the genus Caranx, growing to a maximum known length of 124 cm and a weight of 32 kg, although is rare at lengths greater than 60 cm. The crevalle jack inhabits both inshore and offshore waters to depths of around 350 m, predominantly over reefs, bays, lagoons and occasionally estuaries. Young fish dispersed north by currents in the eastern Atlantic are known to migrate back to more tropical waters before the onset of winter; however, if the fish fail to migrate, mass mortalities occur as the temperature falls below the species' tolerance limits. Order: Perciformes, Suborder: Percoidei, Superfamily: Percoidea, Family: Carangidae.