there are 32,000 of them in the world today
wrasse fish protects a black sea bass.
The scientific name for the Giant Black Sea bass is Stereolepis gigas.
about 3,983,732,761
Sharks
Yes. There are many fish called bass. Some, like the largemouth, smallmouth and spotted bass, are actually large members of the sunfish family. The striped bass, white bass, yellow bass, and white perch (aka, waccamaw, in the south) are true basses, in the family Morone. There are many of sea bass, including the grouper family, black sea bass, sand bass, among others.
It depends if you are talking about the scales on the outside or the flesh on the inside. the flesh on the inside is white/opaque. Black sea bass is a type of grouper. Some of them are black but they can be many different colors. Gray, tiger striped, and some even have dark blue heads. When it is a fish of the sea you can count on variation.
The white bass is a member of the Morone family, with stripers and yellow bass and white perch. The black bass includes largemouth, smallmouth, spotted, and redeye bass, which are sunfish, white bass are open water schooling fish, while black bass are structure orientated fish, ambush hunters. There is also a black sea bass, which is no relation to freshwater bass.
No. Striped bass are the same as rockfish. Common mistake
A symbiotic relationship is an association that is mutually beneficial. Wrasse fish feed on the parasites found on the black sea bass's body. In this case, Wrasse gets to eat, and sea bass gets rid of parasites. It's a Win-Win.
A symbiotic relationship is an association that is mutually beneficial. Wrasse fish feed on the parasites found on the black sea bass's body. In this case, Wrasse gets to eat, and sea bass gets rid of parasites. It's a Win-Win.
Mutualism. Mutualism.
2 minutes - in Guernsey! Longer if they are left in the aquarium