

{
"name":"GulfHogFishManagementArea",
"title":"GulfHogFishManagementArea",
"type":"Map Service",
"typeKeywords":["ArcGIS Server","Service","Map Service"],
"description":"Hogfish, or sometimes \u201chog snapper,\u201d are actually a member of the wrasse family (Labridae).  They boast bright orange, yellow, and blueish-purple colorations.  Hogfish get their name from their elongated snout, which they use to root for crustaceans buried in the sediment.  Their tail is moon-shaped. Males have a characteristic black spot behind their pectoral fins.  Three stocks of hogfish are found in the southeastern US:  the Gulf of Mexico stock, the Florida Keys/East Florida stock, and the Georgia to North Carolina stock.  The Gulf stock occupies the west Florida continental shelf south to about Cape Sable (SEDAR 37, 2014).",
"extent":[[-985105.4727255567,748906.9816368052],[182569.2441171867,1182280.5060709976]],

"url":"https://portal.gulfcouncil.org/arcgis/rest/services/GulfHogFishManagementArea/MapServer"
}
