2 Cool Fishing Forum banner
21 - 39 of 39 Posts
Here is picture of a fluke and southern flounder that I caught last year in Galveston.

The fluke is the one on the left and the southern flounder that we typically catch is on the right. Notice the positioning of the gills and eyes for each. Thats the easiest way to distinguish the two. I usually catch at least 1 fluke in Galveston every year, and most of them are small.
Au contraire. He has them backwards. Blk Jck 24, who started this thread, states "Flukes have eyes on the left side of their bodies, while flounders have eyes on the right side of their bodies." The article http://fishing.answers.com/fish-typ...om-feeding-fish-a-closer-look-at-the-differences-between-a-fluke-and-a-flounder and http://www.screanews.us/LongIsland/Fluke.htm states the same. Fluke with eyes on the left side and larger mouth, flounder with eyes on the right side an smaller mouth. So the 1st picture below, the one on the left (eyes on the right and smaller mouth) is a flounder, and the one on the right (eyes on the left side and larger mouth) is a fluke. That means the second picture below, dbarham catch on Monday, are both Fluke.

All articles I looked at say that Fluke, Flounder, Halibut, etc are all in the species that are called flat-fish, of which there are about 500 subspecies. According to TPWD, the regulations for Flounder says "All species, their hybrids and subspecies". So if you have a Fluke or a Flounder, I would say you better not have more than 2 per person in your boat in November if you fish Texas waters.
 

Attachments

21 - 39 of 39 Posts