
Welcome to the territory of the Freshwater moray.
Freshwater moray
Gymnothorax polyuranodon

The Freshwater moray is a facultatively catadromous species, meaning it reproduces in the sea but spends most of its life in fresh water. In this regard, the Freshwater moray is similar to its cousin the European eel (Anguilla anguilla) which is generally believed to spawn in the Sargasso Sea and then eventually migrate back to European streams and lakes. I won't get into the remarkable cellular and physiological dynamics involved in osmoregulation across such different aquatic habitats. Suffice to say your swollen ankles after eating a big plate of salty kahlua pork 'aint nothing compared to gill energetics moving from a freshwater stream to a hypersaline tropical lagoon.
Freshwater morays are found throughout the Indo-Pacific in Sri Lanka, Indonesia, Borneo, Papua New Guinea, the Philippines, and Fiji. They have also been reported in Micronesia in Palau, and as far south as Australia and New Caledonia. The species has been reported to attain a length of approximately 92.5 cm. The body is yellow in color with rust-brown to black spots, a bit like a leopard, along the length of the eel. The spectacular markings combined with its ability to live in freshwater makes the Freshwater moray particularly attractive to the home aquarium trade. As a result, the species is considered highly vulnerable to exploitation and local depletion throughout its range.
2 comments:
Things I didn't know before reading this post:
1) that freshwater morays existed
2) the words lotic and lentic
Double thanks!
I concur with Jim on point #1. Although I am already skeptical of setting foot in murky fresh water after seeing Stand by Me as a kid...
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