Cobia fish (lat. Rachycentron canadum)
The only member of the Rachycentridae family, and with no
known relatives, the cobia is in a class by itself and a popular
food and sportfish for inshore anglers in areas where it is
prominent.
OTHER NAMES:
ling, cabio, lemonfish,
crab-eater, flathead, black
salmon, black kingfish, sergeant
fish, runner; French:
mafou; Japanese: sugi;
Portuguese: bijupirá.
The body of a cobia is elongated, with a
broad, depressed head. The first dorsal fin consists of 8 to
10 short, depressible spines that are not connected by a
membrane. Both the second dorsal fin and the anal fin each
have 1 to 2 spines and 20 to 30 soft rays. The adult cobia is
dark brown with a whitish underside and is marked on the
sides by silver or bronze lines. A cobia’s shape is comparable
to that of a shark, with a powerful tail fin and the elevated
anterior portion of the second dorsal fin. It can be distinguished
from the similar remora (Remora remora) by the
absence of a suction pad on the head.
Cobia can grow to a length of 6 feet and a
weight of 90 pounds, the average size being 3 feet and 15
pounds. They generally live 9 to 10 years. The all-tackle
world-record cobia weighed 135 pounds, 9 ounces.
Adult cobia often swim alone or
among small schools of other cobia or sharks. They are
believed to spawn in the offshore waters of the northern
Gulf of Mexico during the late spring, between April and
May, and the larvae migrate shoreward. Cobia migrate from
offshore to inshore environs, as well as inshore from east to
west and vice versa. Little about their movements has been
confirmed.
Cobia feed mostly on crustaceans,
particularly shrimp, squid, and crabs (thus the
name “crab eater”), as well as on eels and various small fish
found in shallow coastal waters.
Found
worldwide in tropical and
warm temperate waters,
cobia inhabit the western
Atlantic from Cape Cod to
Argentina (being most
abundant in the Gulf of
Mexico).
Adult cobia prefer
shallow continental shelf
waters, often congregating
along reefs and around
buoys, pilings, wrecks,
anchored boats, and other
stationary or floating
objects. They are found in a
variety of locations over
mud, gravel, or sand bottoms;
in coral reefs and
man-made sloughs; and at
depths of up to 60 feet.