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"Walleye chop" is a term used by walleye anglers for rough water typically with winds of 10 to 25 km/h (6 to 16 mph), and is one of the indicators for good walleye fishing due to the walleyes' increased feeding activity during such conditions. In addition to fishing this chop, night fishing with live bait can be very effective.
Mandelbulb 3D is free software for creating 3D images featuring many effects found in 3D rendering environments. [29] Incendia is a 3D fractal program that uses Iterated Function Systems (IFS) for fractal generation. [30] Visions of Chaos, Boxplorer and Fragmentarium also render 3D images. The open source GnoFract 4D is available. [31]
VistaCreate (formerly Crello) is an online graphic design platform for non-designers, [1] launched in 2016. [ 2 ] [ 3 ] As of 2022, it has more than 10 million users in 192 countries. [ 4 ] [ 5 ]
The blue walleye was long considered to be different from the yellow walleye. [1] Based on morphological study, Carl Leavitt Hubbs declared the blue walleye to be a separate species in 1926. [2] The species was later downgraded to a subspecies. [3] The blue walleye was a commercially valuable fish in the Great Lakes.
Toledo Walleye, a professional ice hockey team based in Toledo, Ohio; Conditions relating to eyes Strabismus, in which the two eyes do not point in the same direction; a variety of heterochromia, in which one eye has a white or blue-ish white iris; eyeshine, as of the walleye fish; Wall eye, one name for a horse's blue eye
Opercular series in bony fish: operculum (yellow), preoperculum (red), interoperculum (green) and suboperculum (pink) The operculum is a series of bones found in bony fish and chimaeras that serves as a facial support structure and a protective covering for the gills ; it is also used for respiration and feeding.
Fish bone is any bony tissue in a fish, although in common usage the term refers specifically to delicate parts of the non-vertebral skeleton of such as ribs, fin spines and intramuscular bones. Not all fish have fish bones in this sense; for instance, eels and anglerfish do not possess bones other than the cranium and the vertebrae.
The cleithrum (pl.: cleithra) is a membrane bone which first appears as part of the skeleton in primitive bony fish, where it runs vertically along the scapula. [1] Its name is derived from Greek κλειθρον = " key (lock) ", by analogy with " clavicle " from Latin clavicula = "little key".