The world's biggest fish is the whale shark. It can grow up to 65 ft and can weigh up to 75,000 pounds!
No. Sturgeon is a freshwater fish. Sturgeon is also one of the longest living fish, as some sturgeon live to be 100 or older.
No, Sturgeon are fish and fish live in water. Sturgeon are a primitive bony fish of the Acipenseridae family usually found in the temperate waters of the Northern hemisphere. They are a valued source of caviar.
It is the giant white sturgeon. They can grow to be over 20 ft long and weigh as much as 1,800lbs. They also can live to be well over 100 yrs old.
A variety of fish and mammals including the Beluga Sturgeon
Some could live hundreds of years,white sturgeon,greenland shark.
The average lifespan of a sturgeon is 100 years old, making it the fish with the longest lifespan.
sturgeon can live in a sea such as the Caspian sea(which is truly a lake) but also live in gulfs and streams
Sturgeons can live for up to 100 years or more, depending on the species and environmental conditions.
Xiphactinus
Small sturgeon eat very small organisms & larvae. As they mature they will eat almost anything such as: decaying matter/fish, mollusks, crustaceans, shrimp, crayfish, snails, clams, muscles, insects, worms, eggs of other fish mainly salmon, worms, some aquatic plants. Small fish such as herring, smelt, sunfish, bass, trout & shad, but also salmon. They like squid and are known to eat mice, rats, & frogs. Mainly dead or alive stuff that is on the bottom but they will pursue live fish and may even feed on the carcass of other sturgeon. Hatchery sturgeon are usually fed specially formulated sinking pellets, but also squid & trout.
No, the earth's core is too hot for anny thing to live in it.
Original answer listed: The biggest freshwater fish in the US is Pike.That would be incorrect. There are several fish found in the US that are larger than the Northern Pike and Muskellunge.The White Sturgeon is the largest freshwater fish found in the US - they can be up to 20 feet long and weigh nearly 1,800 lbs.