There is a white stripe on each side of the belly, which is a bit like a fish with fins taken by fishermen. Is it a shark? What's your name?

I can't see clearly, maybe?

Rachynchidae? Echinomyiidae? Raccoon? Rachel Centrum? fish

What is the picture below? Raccoon? Cobra (sea bream), commonly known as sea bream, tin wax white, sea hay? , Hailizai, Mengzai Fish, Yuzhong, Mengzhong?

The body is slender, nearly cylindrical and the head is flat and wide; Small fat eyes with narrow eyelids. The cleft is horizontal and opens at the snout. The upper and lower jaws have wide villous tooth bands; Hoe bone, palate bone and tongue surface all have fine teeth. The body is covered with small round scales and buried under thick skin; The front plan of the lateral line is wavy, and there are no raised ridges on both sides of the tail handle. No swim bladder. The base of dorsal fin is longer, and the anterior fin is higher, more or less sickle-shaped. There is no left fin, and the caudal fin is deeply concave. The back of the body is dark brown, followed by a silver longitudinal band, and then yellow. The anterior dorsal fin consists of six to nine independent short spines, which is also the origin of the name of this family. The pectoral fin is very large, and the fin is reddish brown to dark brown. The caudal fin has a white edge.

Fish seal family? Sparidae? Blue thistle.

The picture below shows the fish pattern Echeneis naucrates, commonly known as? Long Indian fish, sucker fish, sticky fish, Indian head fish

You don't have to travel long distances by yourself, just because you have suckers attached to sharks, molas, turtles and even boats. You often eat the leftovers of big fish and ectoparasites, or catch invertebrates in shallow water by yourself. This kind of fish is not closely related to the host, and often swims alone without a host.