All my time? Lolz. Remember what I said about avoiding that epic fail button? Seriously you should try and heed it
It took me all of 10 seconds to find the scientific sources to show that your information is not correct. That's how much evidence there is backing up my view compared to you finding the odd bit here and there that doesn't really help you.
But, hey, why let verifiable scientific sources get in the way what of you and your diving buddy (think you) have seen? What the hell do people who spend their lives studying fish know about fish? They even spend a lot of their time reading scientific texts when not collecting and cataloguing fish and they haven't even seen a fish as big as you and your mate. They should probably bow to your superior knowledge. In a similar vein, all those idiots who spend their time looking at decompression theories, tissue compartments and the off gassing rates of different noble gasses for doing deeper diving are probably sad, especially those that use this knowledge based on science to dive in the 120m to 160m or 300m to 600m ranges.
Or maybe, just maybe, they like to base their knowledge on that which can be verified?
And now let us turn to your quote. You have a source which has the maximum size as being less than I quoted and
reports of larger. There are reports of all sorts of things, such as 10 feet red tail catfish and electric eels killing horses. These are what are called unverified reports as it is just someone claiming something
without any evidence to back up what they say. There was no evidence of someone alongside the fish with any measuring aid, nor has any specimen been caught and pulled up anywhere near that size.
I and my diving buddies could claim that the seals we were diving with in July were 20 feet long; just because we have reported it to have happened does not make it true. When such claims are made people turn to what can be evidenced, in the case of maximum sizes they will look at the largest specimens caught and catalogued. In 200 years no one has ever managed to catalogue a
Taeniura lymma larger than 35cm. If they are so abundant in the red sea at the size you claim surely a fisherman will have passed a catch to a scientist or they would have been caught by an ichthyologist?
I repeat again, show me a scientific resourced article saying they grow to 100cm. Your own source says they only grow to 25 cm and then mentions unconfirmed reports (most probably from divers who either cannot size or cannot identify to a species level, such as you and your friend on one of your 100 metre deep air dives - are you sure you weren't just narced? Since you like to ignore science, no doubt you ignore any sort of diving table or computer because, after all, what do those scientists who look at scientific texts and data know about decompression theory compared to you and your buddy?).
If these things really did grow to 100cm do you not think someone would have found a 100cm body for ichthyologists to study? Remember, 200 years have these fish been described and scientists and fishermen have only ever been caught these fish up to a maximum disc size of 35cm. Or do you have a better explanation; maybe the bigger ones have a cloaking facility?
So, I ask (again) do you have scientifically verifiable evidence of a 100cm disc on a
Taeniura lymma? If they are as common as you say at these large sizes then surely many fishermen must have caught such large specimens?
Or maybe, just maybe, it was a case of mistaken identity. Within the same genus is
Taeniura grabata which is somewhat more drab in colouration than
T. lymma but once one is down to a fair depth the colouration will be somewhat more similar due to the absorption of the redder end of the spectrum I would wager they are not too dissimilar.
T. grabata is reported to grow to a 250cm disc and maybe the smaller ones have a similar body shape to their smaller relatives
T. lymma? Their distribution matches up with
Sadly, I feel with the stance you have adopted you will not countenance the idea that your original belief was wrong, but I may be wrong. I have been before and no doubt will be again in the future.
And for the shorter attention span:
TL
R - You have provided nothing to actually back up your claim and refute my points. Try again.