Tubesnout
Aulorhynchus flavidus
Tubesnout (Aulorhynchus flavidus) is a small Pacific coastal fish found in kelp forests, eelgrass beds, and nearshore bays. It is not a common game fish; records are mostly from the northeastern Pacific, and it is better known to biologists than anglers.

识别要点
- Very elongate, tubular snout projecting forward like a pipefish
- Slim silvery-brown body with a small, narrow head
- Small fins set far back on the body, giving a stick-like profile
栖息地
Shallow nearshore marine habitats, especially kelp beds, eelgrass meadows, rocky shorelines, and sheltered bays from low intertidal to a few meters deep.
饵料备注
Rarely targeted by anglers. If caught incidentally, tiny soft-plastic microjigs or very small baited hooks with shrimp bits, amphipods, or mysid-size offerings are most plausible; most sport gear is too large.
行为
A slender, pipefish-like fish that stays close to structure and vegetation, often hovering or moving slowly among kelp and eelgrass. It feeds on tiny crustaceans and other small planktonic prey.
注意事项
No notable human-consumption hazard is well documented, but it is too small and uncommon to be a meaningful food species. Handle gently; as a small marine fish it is vulnerable to desiccation and stress after capture.
钓法备注
Fish slowly and precisely along eelgrass edges, kelp stalks, and calm shallow cover with ultra-light tackle. Expect incidental captures rather than directed catches; minimize handling and release promptly.