Man catches 200 year old fish.

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toasty

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A 40-pound shortraker fish, after minding its business for the past two centuries, was recently caught 10 miles off the coast of Alaska by a Seattle fisherman. But just looking at this thing we kinda wish he just left it where he found it.

Shortrakers, also known as rockfish, are actually quite common in the Pacific and are a prize among deep sea fisherman. They're colored in hues of orange, pink, and red, and can live at depths of nearly 4,000 feet.

The record-breaking shortraker was hauled in near Sitka during the week of June 24. But what's even more impressive than its weight is its remarkable age.

Yahoo! News reports:

Troy Tidingco, Sitka area manager for the state Department of Fish and Game, said the fish is still being analyzed but he believes it is at least 200 years old. Tidingco said that would beat the current record of 175 years. Researchers are able to determine the age of a shortraker by the number of growth rings along its ear bone.

However, a previously caught rougheye rockfish, similar to the shortraker, was believed to have been 205 years old. Still, Tydingco said that record-setting fish “was quite a bit smaller” than the 41-inch specimen Liebman caught.


The fisherman who caught the shortraker, Henry Liebman, says he wants to mount it back home in Seattle, but he did provide the Alaska Department of Fish and Game with a tissue sample so its exact age could be confirmed.






http://io9.com/man-catches-freaky-200-year-old-fish-promptly-kills-it-660802413
 
From one of the comments:
This guys was fishing at 900 feet. That depth is the equivilent of 30 atmospheres of pressure. Rockfish have a gas filled sack called a swim bladder that helps them maintain their buoancy. From that depth, the swim bladder would have massively expanded and almost surely killed the fish before he got it to the surface. I study rockfishes (I'm a marine biologist in Central California) and anything deeper than about 400 feet dies when you get it to the surface. Anything deeper than about 50 feet needs assistance returning to the bottom to recompress.

This guy couldn't have known what he had until he got it the surface and by then it was dead. Cut him some slack.

-edit- Notice that the eyes are bulging out and appear to have "crystallized"? That is from air that escaped from the burst swim bladder and bubbled up behind the eyes. While not always fatal, it is a sign of severe barotrauma and strengthens my case that the fish almost certainly died before he got it.
 
garsh said:
From one of the comments:
This guys was fishing at 900 feet. That depth is the equivilent of 30 atmospheres of pressure. Rockfish have a gas filled sack called a swim bladder that helps them maintain their buoancy. From that depth, the swim bladder would have massively expanded and almost surely killed the fish before he got it to the surface. I study rockfishes (I'm a marine biologist in Central California) and anything deeper than about 400 feet dies when you get it to the surface. Anything deeper than about 50 feet needs assistance returning to the bottom to recompress.

This guy couldn't have known what he had until he got it the surface and by then it was dead. Cut him some slack.

-edit- Notice that the eyes are bulging out and appear to have "crystallized"? That is from air that escaped from the burst swim bladder and bubbled up behind the eyes. While not always fatal, it is a sign of severe barotrauma and strengthens my case that the fish almost certainly died before he got it.

With all that gas and brain damage, had the fish survived, it could have run for public office.
 
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