All I know is that they are not welcome here in the great lakes. They poach on the Walleye and Muskie eggs and young ones. Not good. Although I will admit better than the Sunfish /Bluegills. I wish they would learn to eat the Gobys
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Storm:Neil,
By the looks of your picture it would be a spotted gar. While they seem to be a rarity, they are actually quite common. I have seen them many times in the Rideau and Ottawa rivers, in fact I know of two small shallow bays where the schools of gar are quite large, as are the gar themselves.
I have only seen one while diving, and it was cruising along with the current amidships of the Connie.
They do have sharp needle like teeth in that bony jaw, and can cause a fair bit of damage if they get a hold of you, but for the most part they are not aggressive. They are one of the apex predators in the Great Lakes right up there with the muskie and the Pike.
BTW Nice pic.
I think so too. It's snout is long, but not as extreme as the longnose in the photo they sent.fire_diver:Maybe it's a brand new type. A spotted longnose gar. Maybe the 2 type inter-bred.
I scanned some pages from my Freshwater Fishes Field Guide, which may (or may not) distinguish which type of gar are in your pics.
I couldn't figure out how to upload them directly here, so I added them to the photo gallery:
ScubaBoard Gallery - RetroDiver Jr Gallery - Powered by PhotoPost
Hope this helps1
Cheers!