Tuna closeup

Tuna closeup

Not really visible in the pics, but the second dorsals had yellow in the middle, and very obvious yellow in the tail.


DazSamFishing's picture

Posts: 1518

Date Joined: 19/08/09

Not a yellowfin Matt... well

Sun, 2009-11-29 15:50

Not a yellowfin Matt... well that's my call. You'll find plenty of tuna species with yellow tinges. I'd have to do my research... but the juvenile yellowfins I've caught - are bright yellow/gold with vibrant bars. This looks like a cold water tuna... but being a QLD'er... not quite sure. Stand to be corrected though.

SamC's picture

Posts: 2013

Date Joined: 30/08/06

No YFT

Sun, 2009-11-29 15:57

As Daz said, Jnr yellowfin have distinct vertical markings throughout the whole body.

My call would be a bigeye or SBT!

____________________________________________________________________________

Cheers,

Sam

Tim's picture

Posts: 2497

Date Joined: 26/09/06

YFT

Sun, 2009-11-29 16:06

Heres a YFT from Exmouth Matt

Seems to have yellower fins and the vertical markings along the body that yours doesnt (from that pic anyway).

Whatever it is, it's still a nice bonus for the metro.

hlokk's picture

Posts: 4290

Date Joined: 04/04/08

The camera hasnt really

Sun, 2009-11-29 16:39

The camera hasnt really captured the colours properly. Prob about 6-7kg, might look a little bigger in the pic. This picture here I found looks pretty similar. Of the pics of juvenile YFT, not all have had very bright colour yellow that you're talking about Daz (I know the colouration you mean). Perhaps depending on the temperature they're caught in, it could be different levels of markings. It might not be a YFT tuna though, but the blues i've caught have looked a little different. Is there any physiological things I can use to tell them apart (apart from the colour)? The yellow has unfortunately not come through in any of the pics (it wasnt a 'yeah, thats kinda yellow', more 'see the yellow in the fins'). Tinge isnt quite the right word. There was a yellowy stripe underneath the dark blue bit as well (not really bright, but you could see it depending on the light). Possible even the level of yellow we saw could be another species though?

A few more yellowfin here, here, here. Not all have the really bright colouring. The last looks the size and colouring that we caught (again, none of the yellow came up in the pics for some reason).

Found some pics of tuna with yellow fins here that most people are calling bluefin. Maybe bluefin can have yellowfins :p Though, the linked pics might be northern bluefin, not southern bluefin.

Has anyone got any pics of small YFT caught in cooler waters (maybe from that recent PGFC comp)? I wonder if you can differentiate them by dorsal count? 

NOHA's picture

Posts: 914

Date Joined: 24/06/07

definately a SBT

Sun, 2009-11-29 17:35

Juveniles have yellow in the scond dorsal and the tail is yellowish. They turn black as the fish matures

____________________________________________________________________________

Twin turbo..V8 diesel..Ohh what a feeling!!

No Orange Hats Allowed

honsu chin's picture

Posts: 2086

Date Joined: 20/09/05

Dunno about YFT...but here's

Sun, 2009-11-29 17:59

Dunno about YFT...but here's my SBT for comparo.....

 

I reckon what you got there is either SBT or Bigeye. 

____________________________________________________________________________

 

 

damo6230's picture

Posts: 2029

Date Joined: 07/06/08

nice little tuna matt

Sun, 2009-11-29 18:02

something different for a change

wicked game's picture

Posts: 249

Date Joined: 13/11/08

at the risk of sounding like

Sun, 2009-11-29 18:05

at the risk of sounding like an idiot what does SBT stand for?

Buz's picture

Posts: 1555

Date Joined: 28/08/07

Southern Bluefin Tuna

Sun, 2009-11-29 18:23

Southern Bluefin Tuna

wicked game's picture

Posts: 249

Date Joined: 13/11/08

cheers Buz

Sun, 2009-11-29 18:31

cheers Buz

DazSamFishing's picture

Posts: 1518

Date Joined: 19/08/09

Yep - after a bit more

Sun, 2009-11-29 18:57

Yep - after a bit more research - it's a SBT. Are you eating it Matt? Like to hear how it goes. Perhaps a little bit of sashimi for you tonight!

hlokk's picture

Posts: 4290

Date Joined: 04/04/08

Had it last night, three

Sun, 2009-11-29 21:25

Had it last night, three different ways, and also some out on the boat.

Buz's picture

Posts: 1555

Date Joined: 28/08/07

To easy wicked game. Aussies

Sun, 2009-11-29 19:39

To easy wicked game. Aussies just LOVE making acronyms for everything. TLA (three letter acronyms). Bit like mobile phone texting i reckon. Find lots of them in fishing.

Couple of others.

YFT- Yellowfin Tuna
YTK- Yellowtail Kings

Rick's picture

Posts: 1104

Date Joined: 22/12/06

SBT

Sun, 2009-11-29 21:26

My thoughts are Southern Blue as well, have been a few around lately..

Slice it up,Soy an Wasabi yummmmmmm....

____________________________________________________________________________

PGFC Member

 

Faulkner Family's picture

Posts: 17871

Date Joined: 11/03/08

def a sbt. we have caught a

Sun, 2009-11-29 22:25

def a sbt. we have caught a few of them , they are nice eating when you steak them up length ways, cut out all the dark meat and bake in the oven topped with a mixture of cucumber, tomato, lemon and lime. good to see them around

____________________________________________________________________________

RUSS and SANDY. A family that fishes together stays together

Adam Gallash's picture

Posts: 15610

Date Joined: 29/11/05

yep

Mon, 2009-11-30 16:49

Will confirm what the others have said, definately not a yellowfin.

____________________________________________________________________________

Site Admin - Just ask if you need assistance

hlokk's picture

Posts: 4290

Date Joined: 04/04/08

If the yellow colour

Mon, 2009-11-30 17:31

If the yellow colour actually came through in the pics, it'd probably make sense why we were thinking yellowfin, and from the pics I linked, not all YFT have the bright colours like Huggys one (only seen those colours on YFT caught in the tropics, but maybe thats a coincidence, I dont know?). Seeing as none actually came through in the photo, it makes it look like I have no clue, haha. Is there some reliable method of telling SBT and bigeye apart? (dorsal count, disection, etc?). I hear telling juvie YFT and bigeye is a bit of black art too.

Posts: 1392

Date Joined: 08/01/09

See the white tip on the second dorsal???

Mon, 2009-11-30 21:07

A bigeye wont have that. The bigger fin especially the temperate water type with shorter sickles are hard to diferenciate with bigeye.

____________________________________________________________________________

FEEEISH ONNN!!!