enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. List of fishes of the Black Sea - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/.../List_of_fishes_of_the_Black_Sea

    Kessler, K. T., 1860: A zoological voyage to the northern coast of the Black Sea and Crimea in 1858. Kyiv : 1–248, Pls. 1–2. Murgoci, A. A., 1940: Étude sur quelques espèces du genre Lepadogaster de la mer Noire.

  3. Black gill disease - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_gill_disease

    Black gill disease is visible to the human eye. Affected gills may exhibit crusted, surface-corroding, [citation needed] scattered light brown to black spots or a large black patch on one or both sides of the fish. [3] Discoloration at the gill area will be distinct from the rest of the body. These symptoms are separate from gill fouling or fin ...

  4. Dead zone (ecology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dead_zone_(ecology)

    In the 1970s, marine dead zones were first noted in settled areas where intensive economic use stimulated scientific scrutiny: in the U.S. East Coast's Chesapeake Bay, in Scandinavia's strait called the Kattegat, which is the mouth of the Baltic Sea and in other important Baltic Sea fishing grounds, in the Black Sea, and in the northern ...

  5. Black spot disease (fish) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_spot_disease_(fish)

    A creek chub with black spot disease. Black spot disease is a disease affecting fish. It is caused by larvae (metacercariae) of Diplostomatidae or Heterophyidae flatworms, which are encysted in the skin. It can affect both freshwater and marine [1] fish. [2] [3] It appears as tiny black spots on the skin, fins, and flesh of the fish.

  6. Extremely rare "doomsday fish" found off California coast - AOL

    www.aol.com/extremely-rare-doomsday-fish-found...

    Typically, these fish are deep-sea dwellers and thrive in waters that are the least explored by scientists. Oceangoers with a dead, 12-foot-long oarfish. / Credit: Michael Wang and Owyn Snodgrass

  7. Lutjanus fulviflamma - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lutjanus_fulviflamma

    Lutjanus fulviflamma, the dory snapper, blackspot snapper, black-spot sea perch, finger-mark bream, long-spot snapper, Moses perch or red bream, [3] is a species of marine ray-finned fish belonging to the family Lutjanidae, the snappers. It has a wide Indo-Pacific distribution.

  8. Dead fish blanket Greek tourist port after flooding - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/dead-fish-blanket-greek-tourist...

    When the fish met the sea, the saltwater likely killed them. "They didn't do the obvious, to put a protective net," mayor Beos said, referring to government services. The environment ministry did ...

  9. Twait shad - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Twait_shad

    This fish is more colourful than the Baltic herring. The back is a bluish green colour and the head brownish with a golden tinge on the operculum. The flanks are silvery, sometimes with a bronzy tinge, and there are a distinctive row of six to ten large dark spot just behind the gill cover though these may fade when the fish is dead.