Common questions

What is the biggest grouper fish ever caught?

What is the biggest grouper fish ever caught?

goliath grouper
The heaviest grouper ever caught and certified as an IGFA world record was this 680-pound goliath grouper caught on May 20, 1961, off Fernandina Beach, Florida, using a Spanish mackerel as fishing bait. This particular species of grouper is considered endangered today and protected in the United States and Caribbean.

Can a goliath grouper eat a human?

Goliath groupers may sound intimidating—and for most fish, they are! But humans have little to fear from these creatures. In fact, many people familiar with them call the fish “gentle giants.” It’s still smart to stay away from fully grown goliath groupers. They could eat a person if they wanted to!

How big can a grouper fish get?

The Atlantic goliath grouper can grow to lengths of 2.5 meters (8.2 feet) and weigh up to 363 kilograms (800 pounds).

Has anyone been eaten by grouper?

For example, The New York Times reported in 1895 that a fisherman caught a 1,500-pound Goliath grouper in the Gulf of Mexico. In the 1950s, two children jumped off a bridge in the Florida Keys but only one came up; the other child was said to have been eaten by a Goliath grouper.

How big is a Queensland grouper?

8.8 feet
The giant grouper, or Queensland grouper as it’s known in its native Australian waters, is the largest reef-dwelling bony fish on Earth. Full-grown individuals can grow to nearly 8.8 feet and weigh an astounding 880 pounds. That’s about the size of two adult male gorillas.

Do groupers eat sharks?

“A big grouper is going to eat anything smaller than itself.” Large groupers are known predators of sharks like dogfish, Abel said. And aside from humans, sharks are their own greatest predators, he added.

Why do they call grouper jewfish?

The origin of the fish’s name isn’t clear. The most innocent view traces to a book authored by an English adventurer in 1697; he wrote that the jewfish was a kosher creature favored by Jews in Jamaica. But the more likely theory is that the name traces back even further to medieval anti-Semitism in Europe.