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  2. Pacific barracuda - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pacific_barracuda

    The Barracuda, like most other fish, exhibit external fertilization and lay their eggs in intervals. The parents are not known to care for their young. They are pelagic spawners. In addition, the Pacific Barracuda are open water egg scatterers, meaning they do not guard their eggs and leave eggs after spawning in a water column in the open ...

  3. Great barracuda - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_barracuda

    Females can release about 5,000 to 30,000 eggs. The highest spawn rate occurs in July, August, and September then drops off in the months after especially in winter. [16] Studies conducted on Sphyraena Barracuda in Florida have found females reach sexual maturity as early as 1-2 years of age and 3-4 years in males. [14]

  4. Spawning bed - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spawning_bed

    In fishery management, a spawning bed is an artificial bed constructed by wildlife professionals in order to improve the ability of desired game fish to reproduce. Increasing the spawning ability of a fish population may reduce pressure on a fishery and improve the productivity of supplemental stocking from fish hatcheries .

  5. Fish reproduction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fish_reproduction

    Most fish species spawn eggs that are fertilized externally, typically with the male inseminating the eggs after the female lays them. These eggs do not have a shell and would dry out in the air. Even air-breathing amphibians lay their eggs in water, or in protective foam as with the Coast foam-nest treefrog, Chiromantis xerampelina.

  6. Sphyraena putnamae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sphyraena_putnamae

    Young barracuda drift inshore in spring, and move to deeper water in the late fall. Spawning season is from April until October off southern Florida. [14] Most Males mature at two years of age, and most females mature at three years of age. [14] In Sphyraena putnamae, the sex ratio observed of females:males was 1.49:1 respectively. [14]

  7. External fertilization - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/External_fertilization

    The release of eggs and sperm into the water is known as spawning. [4] In motile species, spawning females often travel to a suitable location to release their eggs. However, sessile species are less able to move to spawning locations and must release gametes locally. [4] Among vertebrates, external fertilization is most common in amphibians ...

  8. Barracuda - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barracuda

    A barracuda is a large, predatory, ray-finned, saltwater fish of the genus Sphyraena, the only genus in the family Sphyraenidae, which was named by Constantine Samuel ...

  9. Australian barracuda - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Australian_barracuda

    The Australian barracuda is greenish on the back, silvery on flanks which fades to white on the belly with a greenish-yellow tail. It has the typical fusiform shape of a barracuda, but it is slimmer than most other species of Sphyraena with a conical snout and a protruding lower jaw, the jaws are lined with fang like teeth and the upper jaw is non-protracting.