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Lane Snapper Fishing Information
source: myfwc.com
illustrations: Diane Rome Peebles
Descriptions: color silvery-pink to reddish with short,
irregular pink and yellow lines on its sides; diffuse
black spot, about as large as the eye; the dorsal fin
centered above the lateral line; outer margin of
caudal fin blackish.
Similar fish: mutton snapper, L. analis (anal fin
rounded in lane snapper, pointed in mutton).
Where found: juveniles INSHORE over grass beds
or shallow reefs; adults OFFSHORE; most common in south Florida.
Size: usually less than 1 pound.
Remarks: spawns March to September, sexually mature at 6 inches; feeds on the bottom, taking crustaceans, mollusks,and fish.
source Wikipedia
The lane snapper (Lutjanus synagris) is silvery-pink to reddish in color, with short, irregular pink and yellow lines on its sides; diffuse black spot, about as large as the eye; the dorsal fin centered above the lateral line; outer margin of caudal fin blackish. Similar fish are the mutton snapper, Lutjanus analis, and the mangrove snapper, Lutjanus griseus.
Juveniles are found inshore over grass beds or shallow reefs. Adults are found offshore off wrecks and on reefs. The lane snapper is abundant in South Florida (specifically in the Florida Keys), extending down into the Caribbean and East into the Bahamas.
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