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DEEP SEA BC S1 EP3 | GLASS SPONGE REEF | LING COD & ROCKFISH 

Captain Quinn
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In this Episode of Deep Sea BC, Captain Quinn searches for giant man eating lingcod, rock fish, yellow eye and the rare and discovers a rare and endangered glass sponge reef.
Fishing has always intrigued me as not only a means to food but also a means to explore the natural world and connect with a place that is beyond my evolutionary reach. You drop a line into a world beneath the water and if you’re lucky you pull something up. I’ve seen some pretty large lingcod over the years but I’ve heard rumours of lingcod reaching monstrous proportions. These giants have been documented at over 1000 feet below the sea and have been caught weighing over 80 lbs. Because of their anatomical design and highly aggressive feeding behavior they are capable of swallowing prey up to 80 percent of their size.
They like to hide in rocky areas with significant current where they can ambush passing prey, it is in these areas that some of the largest Lingcod are rumoured to live. Female lingcod begin to mature at 3 to 5 years of age at an average length of 24 to 30 inches. Males begin to mature at age 2 at a length of 20 inches. The number of eggs per mature female increases with both size and age. Along the Alaska coast, lingcod begin spawning in early December, with peak spawning occurring from mid-January to mid-March. After the eggs are deposited and fertilized in nests in crevices along the reefs, the female lingcod disperse to other areas and leave the male lingcod to guard the egg nests until the eggs hatch which takes from 5 to 11 weeks. Thus, while most egg masses hatch between mid-March and mid-May, some hatching occurs into June. Egg nests, if left unguarded, are generally decimated within 48 hours by rockfish, starfish, sculpins, kelp greenling, and cod. The presence of a male to guard the nest from these predators appears essential for successful spawning. Unfortunately, nest-guarding males are extremely aggressive and vulnerable to predation by seals, sea lions, and anglers. Removal of a male during the nest-guarding period not only results in removal of the fish from the adult spawning population but also results in the likely loss of that male’s nest, thereby affecting future recruitment. Larval and juvenile lingcod are preyed upon by fishes such as salmon, rockfish, and other lingcod.
Glass sponge reefs are one of several species of deep-water coral that exists in the Strait of Georgia. In addition to glass sponge reefs, red tree coral can also be found. These coral reefs can absorb more carbon out of the atmosphere as old growth forests and provide habitat for a variety of marine animals. They also clean, circulate and oxygenate the water.
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25 янв 2023

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Комментарии : 15   
@inafaniel
@inafaniel 2 месяца назад
Amazing narration.
@WildBCFly
@WildBCFly 4 дня назад
Do you still fish steelhead? Your videos got me into it back in the day 7-8 yrs ago. Looks like you're on the Island now. There is great steelhead around here.
@indyreno2933
@indyreno2933 Год назад
Mail-cheeked fish are spiny-rayed fish of the order Scorpaeniformes, there are over two-thousand, one-hundred, and eighteen extant species within forty-two families, fourteen superfamilies, and five suborders, the five main groups within the Scorpaeniformes order are the suborders Normanichthyoidei (Bacaladillo, Prettyfin, and Sandfish), Platycephaloidei (Flatheads and Gurnards), Zoarcoidei (Eelpouts, Wolffish, Wolfeel, Pricklebacks, Wrymouths, Gunnels, Goblin Goby, Graveldiver, Ronquils, and Quillfish), Cottoidei (Sculpins, Lumpsuckers, Snailfish, Greenlings, Blackcod, and Combfish), and Scorpaenoidei (Scorpionfish, Lionfish, Stonefish, Coral Crouchers, Rockfish, Cofish, Prowfish, Toad Blenny, Horsefish, and Pigfish), Normanichthyoidei is the most basal living suborder of mail-cheeked fish and consists of two superfamilies, Trichodontoidea (Sandfish) with the monotypic families Trichodontidae (American Sandfish) and Arctoscopidae (Asiatic Sandfish) and Normanichthyoidea (Bacaladillo and Prettyfin) with the monotypic families Normanichthyidae (Bacaladillo) and Centrogenyidae (Prettyfin), followed by Platycephaloidei, which consists of two superfamilies being Trigloidea (Gurnards) with the families Triglidae (Common Gurnards), Peristediidae (Armored Gurnards), and Dactylopteridae (Flying Gurnards) and Platycephaloidea (Flatheads) with the families Platycephalidae (True Flatheads), Hoplichthyidae (Ghost Flatheads), and Bembridae (Deepwater Flatheads), then followed by Zoarcoidei, which consists of four superfamilies, Bathymasteroidea (Ronquils and Quillfish) with the families Bathymasteridae (Ronquils) and Ptilichthyidae (Quillfish), Zaproroidea (Goblin Goby and Graveldiver) with the monotypic families Zaproridae (Goblin Goby) and Scytalinidae (Graveldiver), Zoarcoidea (Eelpouts) with the families Eulophiidae (Spinous Eelpouts) and Zoarcidae (True Eelpouts), and Anarhichadoidea (Wolffish, Wolfeel, Pricklebacks, Wrymouths, and Gunnels) with the families Pholidae (Gunnels), Cryptacanthodidae (Wrymouths), Stichaeidae (Pricklebacks), and Anarhichadidae (Wolffish and Wolfeel), the most recent split is between the suborders Cottoidei and Scorpaenoidei, the Cottoidei suborder contains three superfamilies, Hexagrammoidea (Greenlings, Blackcod, and Combfish) with the families Zaniolepididae (Combfish), Anoplopomatidae (Blackcod), and Hexagrammidae (Greenlings), Cyclopteroidea (Lumpsuckers and Snailfish) with the families Liparidae (Snailfish) and Cyclopteridae (Lumpsuckers), and Cottoidea (Sculpins) with the families Jordaniidae (Sailfin Sculpins), Agonidae (Poachers), Rhamphocottidae (Gruntfish), Bathylutichthyidae (Antarctic Sculpins), Ereuniidae (Deepwater Bullhead Sculpins), Psychrolutidae (Fathead Sculpins), Comephoridae (Baikal Sculpins), Hemitripteridae (Sea Ravens), and Cottidae (Common Sculpins), and the Scorpaenoidei suborder is also divided into three superfamilies, Congiopodoidea (Horsefish, Pigfish, and Velvetfish) with the families Aploactinidae (Velvetfish) and Congiopodidae (Horsefish and Pigfish), Pataecoidea (Prowfish and Toad Blenny) with the families Gnathanacanthidae (Toad Blenny) and Pataecidae (Prowfish), and Scorpaenoidea (Scorpionfish, Lionfish, Stonefish, Coral Crouchers, Rockfish, and Cofish) with the families Eschmeyeridae (Cofish), Sebastidae (Rockfish), Pteroidae (Lionfish, Stonefish, and Coral Crouchers), and Scorpaenidae (Scorpionfish).
@strydershadow391
@strydershadow391 Год назад
What an amazing series of videos. Well done Captain!
@TheCaptainQuinn
@TheCaptainQuinn Год назад
Thanks!
@Dream-season
@Dream-season Год назад
Just a legendary set of hair on the captain …. Not enough people are talking about it
@rileyfulljames1200
@rileyfulljames1200 Год назад
Wow great work don't stop.
@TheCaptainQuinn
@TheCaptainQuinn Год назад
Thanks for watching! Ill do my best :)
@crwildmb
@crwildmb Год назад
Powerful message and awesome series mate. Thanks for sharing this knowledge and spreading awareness about this indispensable ecosystem and plethora of wildlife. You're the man quinn!
@TheCaptainQuinn
@TheCaptainQuinn Год назад
Glad you enjoyed it!
@SledorFish
@SledorFish Год назад
Amazing footage! I'm going to have to watch this one a few times to try and take in all the information you gave us.
@TheCaptainQuinn
@TheCaptainQuinn Год назад
Happy to hear it!
@gizliliman1
@gizliliman1 27 дней назад
whats happen to this channel,no videos for whole year
@Douken
@Douken 21 день назад
Bro, you need to grow your hair back. You looked like a damn viking ready to kill fish for breakfast.
@neelnahid16
@neelnahid16 10 месяцев назад
Hello Due to some problems in your channel, your subscribers are not increasing, the channel is not ranking your channel is not SEO The tag SEO is not done in the channel The video thumbnail is not good The rank tag is not given in your video The keyword title is not given The topic keyword is given no high volume rank tag is not given no topic tag is given on your channel Now you think how will your channel rank even after having so many problems? I am a RU-vid Expert
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