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Katsuwonus pelamis (skipjack tuna) Fig. 56. Skipjack, Katsuwonus pelamis
THE PACIFIC TUNAS 189
Title: California fish and game
Authors: California. Dept. of Fish and Game; California. Fish and Game Commission; California. Division of Fish and Game
Source book page: https://archive.org/stream/californiafishga31_4cali/#page/n28/mode/1up
Date 1825
Source: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File%3ACalifornia_fish_and_game_%2819890123654%29.jpg
The skipjack tuna (Katsuwonus pelamis) is a medium-sized fish in the tuna family, Scombridae. It is a cosmopolitan pelagic fish found in tropical and warm-temperate waters. The skipjack tuna is a streamlined, fast-swimming pelagic fish, common in tropical waters throughout the world, where it inhabits surface waters in large shoals (up to 50,000 fish), feeding on fish, crustaceans, cephalopods, and mollusks. It is an important prey species for sharks and large pelagic fishes and is often used as live bait when fishing for marlin. The skipjack tuna has no scales, except on the lateral line and the corselet (a band of large, thick scales forming a circle around the body behind the head). It commonly reaches fork lengths up to 80 cm and a mass of 8–10 kg.
Order: Scombriformes
Family: Scombridae
Subfamily: Scombrinae
Tribe: Thunnini
Genus: Katsuwonus Kishinouye, 1915
Species: Katsuwonus pelamis (Linnaeus, 1758)
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