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Hephaestus carbo (J. D. Ogilby & McCulloch, 1916) (Coal grunter) Hephaestus epirrhinos Vari & Hutchins, 1978 (Longnose sooty grunter) Hephaestus fuliginosus (Macleay, 1883) (Sooty grunter) Hephaestus habbemai (M. C. W. Weber, 1910) (Mountain grunter) Hephaestus jenkinsi (Whitley, 1945) (Western sooty grunter ) Hephaestus komaensis Allen & Jebb ...
The sooty grunter (Hephaestus fuliginosus), also known by the name black bream, blubberlips, Northern grunter or purple grunter, is a species of freshwater ray-finned fish, a grunter from the family Terapontidae. It inhabits coastal and inland freshwater creeks and rivers of northern Australia.
The drum typically weighs 5–15 lb (2.3–6.8 kg). The world record was caught on Nickajack Lake in Tennessee, and weighed in at 54 lb 8 oz (24.7 kg). [12] The freshwater drum is frequently gray or silvery but may be more bronze or brown colored, common in the Lake Erie population.
Pages in category "Hephaestus (fish)" The following 7 pages are in this category, out of 7 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. ...
A recipe for fried Rohu fish is mentioned in Manasollasa, a 12th-century Sanskrit encyclopedia compiled by Someshvara III, who ruled from present-day Karnataka. In this recipe, the fish is marinated in asafoetida and salt after being skinned. It is then dipped in turmeric mixed in water before being fried. [10]
Vulcan is the patron of trades related to ovens (cooks, bakers, confectioners) as attested in the works of Plautus, [48] Apuleius (the god is the cook at the wedding of Amor and Psyche) [49] and in Vespa's short poem in the Latin Anthology about the litigation between a cook and a baker.
Atlantic porpoises are thought to follow the seasonal migration of bait fish, like herring, and their diet varies between seasons. The stomach contents of Dall's porpoises reveal that they mainly feed on cephalopods and bait fish, like capelin and sardines. Their stomachs also contained some deep-sea benthic organisms. [18]
Mahi-mahi (and many other fish) often swim near debris such as floating wood, five-gallon bucket lids, palm trees and fronds, or sargasso weed lines and around fish buoys. Frigatebirds search for food accompanying the debris or sargasso. Experienced fishing guides can tell what species are likely around the debris by the birds' behavior.