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Download QR code; Print/export Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects Wikimedia Commons; ... The freshwater and marine Fish which are native ...
Download QR code; Print/export Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects Wikidata item; Appearance. ... Japanese rice fish; Japanese white crucian carp; K.
The Black kokanee or Kunimasu, once thought to be extinct, is now classed as extinct in the wild. This list of freshwater fish recorded in Japan is primarily based on the IUCN Red List, which, for fish found in inland waters, details the conservation status of some two hundred and sixty-one species, seventy-three of them endemic. [1]
The Japanese taimen (Hucho perryi) is the largest fish to enter freshwater in Japan and may reach sizes of up to 2 meters in length. The Japanese taimen is a critically endangered species including the Japanese populations which are restricted to the rivers and surrounding ocean of Hokkaido. Also present is the Japanese dace (Tribolodon ...
The Japanese white crucian carp, also known as Japanese carp, white crucian carp, or gengoro-buna (Carassius cuvieri), is a species of freshwater fish in the carp family (family Cyprinidae). It is found in Japan and, as an introduced species, in several other countries in Asia. [2] This fish is closely related to the commonly known goldfish.
The big-scaled redfin (Pseudaspius hakonensis), also known as the Japanese dace [2] and ugui (鯎 or 鵜喰), [3] is a medium-sized Asian fish. [4] First described by Albert Günther in 1877 as Leuciscus hakonensis, [4] it was the type specimen of the genus Tribolodon, having been described again as Tribolodon punctatum by Henri Émile Sauvage when he established that genus in 1883. [5]
Hypomesus nipponensis (Japanese smelt, in Japanese: wakasagi [2]) is a commercial food fish native to the lakes and estuaries of northern Honshu and Hokkaido, Japan, Korea, and Sakhalin, Khabarovsk Krai, and Primorsky Krai, Russia. [1] It has been introduced in other locations, including the San Francisco Delta of the United States.
The Kirikuchi Char is endangered due to human disturbances, including degradation and overharvesting. Additionally, the species continues to become more endangered due to the loss of genetic diversity from hybridization. [3] Up to 60% of the diet of Kirikuchi char is made up of orthopterans driven into the water by nematomorph parasites. The ...