sealord > Unless you SCUBA dive the best place to see the wide variety of fish caught in Madeiran waters is to visit the Municipal fish market in Funchal or visit the concrete harbour wall at the small coastal town of Ribeira Brava on Madeira's south coast.  Here you will usually find recreational fishermen who land a wide variety of species from sharks to sea bream, jacks and even trumpetfish.  This guelly jack, Pseudocaranx dentex, was one of the many species landed by recreational fishermen on the harbour wall at Ribeira Brava.
File No. 30-518
©RLLord
fishinfo@guernsey.net
sealord > The head of a snake pipefish, Entelurus aequoraeus, which entered a Clive Brown crab pot off the south coast of Guernsey on 17 September 2004
File No. 28-751 
©RLLord
fishinfo@guernsey.net
sealord > A fifteen-spined stickleback, Spinachia spinachia, from the Queen Elizabeth II marina, St. Peter Port, Guernsey, Channel Islands, Great Britain.  Fifteen-spined sticklebacks are common in the marina.
Photographed on 25 August 2003
File No. 9-702
©RLLord
fishinfo@guernsey.net
sealord > A short-spined sea scorpion, Taurulus bubalis, from a pontoon in the Queen Elizabeth II marina, St. Peter Port harbour, Guernsey, Channel Islands, Great Britain
Photographed on 19 September 2005
File No. 33-796
©RLLord
fishinfo@guernsey.net
sealord > shanny, Lipophrys pholis, from the sea-shore at La Valette on Guernsey's east coast.
Photographed on 18 January 2005
File No. 13-801
©RLLord 
fishinfo@guernsey.net
sealord > The head of a shore clingfish, Lepadogaster lepadogaster, from the sea-shore at La Valette on Guernsey's east coast.
File No. 24-717
©RLLord
fishinfo@guernsey.net
sealord > An anterior view of the shore clingfish, Lepadogaster lepadogaster, from the sea-shore at La Valette on Guernsey's east coast. 
File No. 27-717
©RLLord
fishinfo@guernsey.net
sealord > The common dragonet, Callionymus lyra, lying on the sand in the bay of Grand Havre on the north coast of Guernsey
Photographed on 29 August 2003
File No. 3-704
©RLLord
fishinfo@guernsey.net
Unless you SCUBA dive the best place to see the wide variety of fish caught in Madeiran waters is to visit the Municipal fish market in Funchal or visit the concrete harbour wall at the small coastal town of Ribeira Brava on Madeira's south coast. Here you will usually find recreational fishermen who land a wide variety of species from sharks to sea bream, jacks and even trumpetfish. This guelly jack, Pseudocaranx dentex, was one of the many species landed by recreational fishermen on the harbour wall at Ribeira Brava.
File No. 30-518
©RLLord
fishinfo@guernsey.net
sealord > Unless you SCUBA dive the best place to see the wide variety of fish caught in Madeiran waters is to visit the Municipal fish market in Funchal or visit the concrete harbour wall at the small coastal town of Ribeira Brava on Madeira's south coast.  Here you will usually find recreational fishermen who land a wide variety of species from sharks to sea bream, jacks and even trumpetfish.  This guelly jack, Pseudocaranx dentex, was one of the many species landed by recreational fishermen on the harbour wall at Ribeira Brava.
File No. 30-518
©RLLord
fishinfo@guernsey.net
Unless you SCUBA dive the best place to see the wide variety of fish caught in Madeiran waters is to visit the Municipal fish market in Funchal or visit the concrete harbour wall at the small coastal town of Ribeira Brava on Madeira's south coast. Here you will usually find recreational fishermen who land a wide variety of species from sharks to sea bream, jacks and even trumpetfish. This guelly jack, Pseudocaranx dentex, was one of the many species landed by recreational fishermen on the harbour wall at Ribeira Brava.
File No. 30-518
©RLLord
fishinfo@guernsey.net
See photo in original gallery.

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