Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Orange roughy are generally sluggish and demersal; they form aggregations with a natural population density of up to 2.5 fish per m 2, now reduced to about 1.0 per m 2. These aggregations form in and around geologic structures, such as undersea canyons and seamounts, where water movement and mixing is high, ensuring dense prey concentrations.
Lohikeitto is a common dish in Finland and other Nordic countries that consists of salmon fillets, boiled potatoes and leeks. [1] Laulau – Traditional Polynesian dish of cooked of taro leaves and stem; Lavangi (food) – Azerbaijani dish
The orange roughy's metabolic phases are thought to be related to seasonal variations in the fish's prey concentrations, with the inactive phase being a means to conserve energy during lean periods. Slimeheads are pelagic spawners; that is, spawning aggregations are formed and the fish release eggs and sperm en masse directly into the water.
The orange roughy, a.k.a. deep sea perch; The splendid sea perch; The red sea perch, Lutjanus argentimaculatus; The Waigieu seaperch; The bluestripe snapper, a.k.a. bluestripe sea perch; The striped surfperch, Embiotoca lateralis, also called the striped seaperch; The swallowtail sea perch
Oceana claims that escolar has been mislabeled or otherwise confused with the following fish: Atlantic cod, oilfish (related to escolar but in a different genus), rudderfish, blue cod, black cod, king tuna, grouper, orange roughy, sea bass, gemfish, Chilean sea bass, albacore tuna, and white tuna.
Hoplostethus marisrubri Kotlyar, 1986 - Red Sea roughy; Hoplostethus mediterraneus (Cuvier, 1829) - Mediterranean slimehead, silver roughy; Hoplostethus melanopeza C. D. Roberts & M. F. Gomon, 2012 [2] - New Zealand giant sawbelly; Hoplostethus melanopterus Fowler, 1938 - blackfin roughy; Hoplostethus melanopus (M. C. W. Weber, 1913 ...
Gephyroberyx darwinii, the big roughy or Darwin's slimehead, is a species of fish in the slimehead family found widely in the Atlantic and Indo-Pacific oceans. [2] This deep-sea species reaches a length of 60 cm (2.0 ft) and is mainly found at depths of 200 to 500 m (660–1,640 ft), but has been recorded between 9 and 1,210 m (30–3,970 ft ...
Though they are small, they often have incredibly elongated lifespans, probable result of living in the deep sea (a trait shared with other unrelated fishes like the orange roughy). The warty oreo is able to live for up to 210 years, which puts it at one of the longest living vertebrates on Earth.