Cobia
Rachycentron canadum
Cobia (Rachycentron canadum), also called black kingfish, lemonfish, crabeater, or ling in some fishing communities, is a large warm-water marine fish found in warm Atlantic, Indian, and western Pacific waters. It has a long brown body, a pale underside, a broad flattened head, and a dark side stripe that can make juveniles resemble remoras. Cobia often travel near reefs, buoys, wrecks, rays, turtles, and sharks, feeding on crabs, squid, and smaller fish. Fast growth and firm white flesh have made it important to anglers, seafood markets, and aquaculture programs.
Cobia is not an aquarium species for ordinary private keepers; adults are powerful open-water fish that may reach well over a meter in length. Practical management usually means recreational fishing under local size and bag limits, commercial harvest, or intensive culture in sea cages and recirculating systems. Farms monitor water temperature, oxygen, stocking density, nutrition, and disease closely because the species grows quickly only under warm, clean conditions. Hatcheries produce juveniles through controlled spawning, while researchers refine feeds and reduce risks linked to escapes, waste, and reliance on marine ingredients.