Bonefish fishing (lat. Albula vulpes)
Although the bonefish was previously thought to be the
only member of the Albulidae family, there are now five recognized
species. The bonefish is the only significant sportfish
among them, however, and is one of the most coveted
of all saltwater gamefish. In keeping with its scientific name,
which means “white fox,” it is indeed a wary, elusive creature,
one that usually must be stalked with stealth and that
bolts with startling speed when hooked or alarmed.
Although bonefish have little food value to anglers and
virtually all are released, they are a subsistence food in some
locations. It is generally believed that bonefish are not good
table fare, but some gourmands maintain that bonefish
flesh is firm and tasty and the roe a delicacy.
OTHER NAMES:
banana fish, phantom,
silver ghost, ladyfish, grubber,
silver streak, tenny;
French: banane de mer,
sorte de mulet; Hawaiian:
o’io; Japanese: soto-iwashi;
Portuguese: juruma;
Spanish: macabí, zorro.
The bonefish has armor plates, instead of
scales, on its conical head and is distinguished from the similar
ladyfish by its suckerlike mouth and snout-shaped nose,
which are adapted to its feeding habits. It also has a single
dorsal fin and a deeply forked tail. The coloring is bright silver
on the sides and the belly, with bronze or greenish-blue
tints on the back; there may also be yellow or dark coloring
on parts of the fin and the snout, and sometimes there are
dusky markings on the sides. The young have bronze backs
and nine narrow crossbands.
Although the average bonefish weighs between 2
and 5 pounds, bonefish weighing up to 10 pounds are not
uncommon. They can grow to 41 inches in length, averaging
1 to 21⁄2 feet long. The all-tackle world-record catch is a
19-pound fish.
The particulars of bonefish reproduction
are not well known, although it is thought that
bonefish spawn from late winter to late spring, depending
on locale. With a small head and a long, transparent body,
the young bonefish looks like an eel until it undergoes a leptocephalus larval stage. It grows to about 21⁄2 inches long
during this period, then experiences a metamorphosis that
shrinks the young bonefish to half that size. The fins begin
to appear during the shrinking, and in 10 to 12 days it
attains the adult bonefish body form, only in miniature size.
This growth process is similar in tarpon and ladyfish development.
The young migrate out to the open sea to live on
plankton, returning as juveniles to live in the shallows.
Generally, bonefish are a schooling fish; smaller specimens
are seen traveling in large numbers on the flats,
whereas larger ones prefer smaller schools or groups of 5 to
10 fish.
Bonefish feed on crabs, shrimp,
clams, shellfish, sea worms, sea urchins, and small fish. They
prefer feeding during a rising tide, often doing so near mangroves.
They root in the sand with their snouts for food and
are often first detected while feeding with their bodies tilted
in a head-down, tail-up manner, with all or part of their tail
fins protruding from the surface. These are referred to as
tailing fish. Bonefish also sometimes stir up the bottom
when rooting along, which is called mudding; this can be a
telltale indicator to the observant angler.
Bonefish are
found worldwide in tropical
and subtropical waters.
Around North America, they
are most bountiful in the
Florida Keys, the Bahamas,
and the Caribbean, more so
in the winter than in the
summer; they are also
somewhat abundant in
Belize, Panama, and other
Central American countries.
Occurring in
warm coastal areas, bonefish
inhabit the shallows of
intertidal waters, including
around mud and sand flats,
as well as in mangrove
lagoons. They are also
found in waters up to 30
feet deep and are able to
live in oxygen-poor water
because they possess lunglike
bladders into which they
can inhale air.