View Full Version : Fish ID help needed.


tlapinski
01-11-2006, 05:19 PM
When I was younger I used to gather these small fish from under rocks in CT. They were always in the puddles under rocks in this stretch of shoreline. I had not seen any in a long time until I snagged one on a darter back in September. Again, the shoreline was very rocky. To best describe the fish would be to call it a juvenile wolf fish. I looked in my copy of Fishes of the Gulf of Maine, but could not positively ID it. It still looked most like a baby wolf fish. Most of the time when I was little, they were between 2" - 5". The one I "caught" this summer was about 4" long. Any thoughts?

MakoMike
01-11-2006, 05:38 PM
Some type of Goby. Do a google on "goby" and see if you can find a picture of it.

Nebe
01-11-2006, 06:03 PM
toadfish??

RIROCKHOUND
01-11-2006, 07:15 PM
Probably a goby.. they are fairly common...
it wasnt baby choggie was it? that have some funky teeth when they are young

tlapinski
01-11-2006, 07:31 PM
I did a goby image search, and it looked like that. What the hell is a choggie? I've heard the term a million times, but never got a sure idea of what it is. Baby cunner?

It didn't look like a toadfish, but that's a good guess.

RIROCKHOUND
01-11-2006, 07:57 PM
yeah cunner = choggie

tlapinski
01-11-2006, 08:35 PM
Ok, it wasn't a choggie then.

Surely Bassey
01-11-2006, 08:44 PM
maybe a tommycod?

Max Power
01-11-2006, 09:34 PM
Matches the description of an inshore lizard fish to a degree, and they do inhabit those types of environments. It could also be some sort of pout, but I'm not sure they occupy shallow water.

Clammer
01-11-2006, 10:22 PM
Are they brown /kinder a slippery body//XL large mouth .. If soooooooooooo we used to call them dogfish /but actually they are in the toadfish family ><>,.,

clambelly
01-11-2006, 10:29 PM
[QUOTE=tlapinski] What the hell is a choggie? I've heard the term a million times, but never got a sure idea of what it is. Baby cunner?
QUOTE]

choggies are those little fishies that the oriental folks love to load their buckets with down at the canal! catch 'em with periwinkles.:happy:

Christian
01-11-2006, 10:30 PM
i know exactly what your talking about, i think.

were they redish? eel like, but more like a wolf fish.

Christian
01-11-2006, 10:35 PM
here, i took a guess. because usually i find these around rocks, and they look like eels, so i searched rock eel. this is what i am talking about.

http://www.gma.org/fogm/Pholis_gunnellus.htm

Christian
01-11-2006, 10:46 PM
aka - gunnel fish

ridler72
01-11-2006, 11:01 PM
I found something similar up in Cape Ann at Pebble Beach a couple of years ago in the belly of a Bass. It was pink and grayish with a head and body like a wolf fish. about 6" long.

ridler72
01-11-2006, 11:04 PM
Thats looks like the one!~ Gunnel fish, nice.

ridler72
01-11-2006, 11:17 PM
Pink and chartreuse. Another reason to buy more plastics.

striprman
01-11-2006, 11:30 PM
when I was a kid, mom and dad used to have a seasonal trailer at Libbys oceanside camp in York maine. We would go swimming and fishing at long sands beach and lobster cove. We would look for lobsters under the rocks on the long rocky outcroppings there and find "gunnels" all the time.

Christian
01-12-2006, 01:10 AM
when I was a kid, mom and dad used to have a seasonal trailer at Libbys oceanside camp in York maine. We would go swimming and fishing at long sands beach and lobster cove. We would look for lobsters under the rocks on the long rocky outcroppings there and find "gunnels" all the time.


EXACTLY where i found mine. small world. my mom used to stay there as a kid as well.
yellow poppers at sunrise over that boulder field.:kewl:

tlapinski
01-12-2006, 06:45 AM
Thanks Christian, I think you figured it out! :kewl: I'll have to find a couple this season and get a good picture of one. Here's another reason why I'm here!

Clogston29
01-12-2006, 07:30 AM
I posted recently about finding what I thought were a small cusk in a bass caught on BI. Looking at these pictures, it seams that this may have been what it was. The ones I found were 3" - 4".