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Acipenseridae (Sturgeons) Acipenser. Acipenser baerii — Siberian sturgeon. Acipenser gueldenstaedtii — Russian sturgeon. Acipenser mikadoi — Sakhalin sturgeon. Acipenser nudiventris — Fringebarbel sturgeon. Acipenser persicus — Persian sturgeon. Acipenser ruthenus — Sterlet. Acipenser schrenckii — Japanese sturgeon.
Category. : Fish of Russia. Wikimedia Commons has media related to Fish of Russia. The freshwater and marine Fish which are native— indigenous to Russia and its adjacent oceans and seas, in Europe and Asia. When the distribution range in Russia is known please also use Category: Fish of Europe and/or Category: Fish of East Asia.
Pallas, 1773. Siberian taimen (Hucho taimen), also known as the common taimen (Russian: Обыкнове́нный тайме́нь, romanized: Obyknovénnyĭ taĭménʹ), Siberian giant trout or Siberian salmon, is a species of salmon -like ray-finned fish from the genus Hucho in the family Salmonidae. These fish are found in rivers in Siberia ...
A 1000-kg, 4.17-m-long beluga fish from the Volga River (National Museum of Tatarstan, Kazan, Russia) Among all extant bony fishes, the beluga sturgeon rivals the ocean sunfish (Mola sp.) as the most massive fish and is the second-longest bony fish after the giant oarfish (Regalecus glesne). It is the largest freshwater fish in the world.
Omul. The omul, Coregonus migratorius, also known as Baikal omul (Russian: байкальский омуль), is a whitefish species of the salmon family endemic to Lake Baikal in Siberia, Russia. It is considered a delicacy and is the object of one of the largest commercial fisheries on Lake Baikal. In 2004, it was listed by an unknown group ...
The kaluga (Huso dauricus), also known as the river beluga, is a large predatory sturgeon found in the Amur River basin from Russia to China and near Hokkaido in Japan. [1] With a maximum size of at least 1,000 kg (2,205 lb) and 5.6 m (18 ft), the kaluga is one of the biggest of the sturgeon family. Like the slightly larger beluga, it spends ...
Callionymus baikalensis. Pallas, 1776 [1] Comephorus, known as the golomyankas or Baikal oilfish, are a genus comprising two species of peculiar, sculpin fishes endemic to Lake Baikal in Russia. Comephorus is the only genus in the subfamily Comephorinae. Golomyankas are pelagic fishes and the main food source for the Baikal seal.
The Tale of the Fisherman and the Fish (Russian: «Сказка о рыбаке и рыбке», romanized: Skazka o rybake i rybke) is a fairy tale in verse by Alexander Pushkin, published 1835. The tale is about a fisherman who manages to catch a "Golden Fish" which promises to fulfill any wish of his in exchange for its freedom.