
Species - Bigeye Tuna
Scientific Name - (Thunnus obesus)
Physical Description - Confusingly similar in looks to the Yellowfin TunaŠeven down to the yellow inlets edged in black. The gold stripe common to the Yellowfin is usually absent, but may be dimly present. The eye is indeed larger, but this might not be readily apparent without a side-by-side comparison. A scientist might have to examine the liver to be perfectly sure of identification with some specimens, but anglers seldom have to worry, simply because the Bigeye is a rare catch, whereas the Yellowfin is common in many areas. About the same range as the Yellowfin - from a few pounds to more than 300, but most taken off Florida have run 50-100 pounds. World record 435 pounds; Florida record 167 pounds.
Range - Uncommon but present off all Florida coasts, the Bahamas and the Caribbean.
Habitat - The open sea. As the bigeye proves, it stays deep most of the time and so may not be as rare as as the low number of angling encounters would indicate.
Spawning Habits - N/A.
Food Usage/Selection - Excellent.
Sporting Qualities - A good-sized Tuna. Enough said.
- Notes
- Not targeted but sometimes hits trolled lures or shows up in a chumline; see Yellowfin Tuna.
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