I recently shared a picture from a Redington trip to Mexico that showed a nice Mexican bonefish. Someone remarked that they were amazed how dark the fish was. It was dark (below), but that same fish, feeding in a different part of its habitat almost certainly would have been lighter in color.
You see, bonefish can, and do, change color depending on their surroundings. They can’t pull a flounder on you and change their coloration to mimic precise shades of the bottom, but they can alter their color to better blend.
Bonefish have chromatophores which they use to control the pigment. That pigment can be concentrated to bring out those dark vertical bands on their backs and make the whole fish look green when feeding over grass. The bonefish can disperse pigment when feeding over white sand, making the silver fox look, well, silver, almost totally colorless.
The fish below was caught over white sand in Andros and, as you can see, it doesn’t have much color. It was blending in nicely.
They can’t do this instantly, however, which is why my favorite kind of bonefish is the bonefish moving in between dark and light bottoms. That dark backed bonefish stands out pretty nicely over a white bottom.
So, it isn’t that there are light populations and dark populations so much as there are bonefish, capable of adapting to whatever environment they happen to find their food in.
To understand more about the physiology of bonefish, I strongly recommend Fly-Fishing for Bonefish by Chico Fernandez. Dr. Aaron Adams handles the biology and does a pretty fine job of it.
- If you liked the story above, check out these stories below
- Bonefish and Tarpon Trust + Pirates (1.000)
- Bonefish Preservation (1.000)
- Tag Ends - 4-18-10 (1.000)
Tags: Aaron Adams, biology, bonefish
I have seen them with black backs at Water Cay. They will turn black on a dark bottom on a rainy day.
They also appear to darken when stressed. The bars will often become more prominent while fighting and landing a fish.
All the bonefish I have caught in my life, probably over 100, have been mexican bonefish. And I have caught ”almost white”, green, striped and some kind of blueish. Yes, bones have good camo. No, the color they have when you catch them has nothing to do with the country.
Yeah, I never meant to imply bones from one place are one color… it is alllll about the cover they care coming from. Light fish = light background. Dark fish = dark background.
Hay caramba!