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The European conger (Conger conger) is a species of conger of the family Congridae. It is the heaviest eel in the world and native to the northeast Atlantic , including the Mediterranean Sea . Description and behavior
The American chef and food writer Julia Child, who lived in Marseille for a year, wrote: "to me the telling flavor of bouillabaisse comes from two things: the Provençal soup base—garlic, onions, tomatoes, olive oil, fennel, saffron, thyme, bay, and usually a bit of dried orange peel—and, of course, the fish—lean (non-oily), firm-fleshed ...
It includes some of the largest types of eels, ranging up to 2 m (6 ft) or more in length, [3] in the case of the European conger. Large congers have often been observed by divers during the day in parts of the Mediterranean Sea , and both European and American congers are sometimes caught by fishermen along the European and North American ...
Other common names for this fish include conger, dog eel, [1] poison eel [1] and sea eel. [1] It is a marine fish with a widespread distribution in the Western Atlantic from Cape Cod in Massachusetts to northeastern Florida in United States and the northern Gulf of Mexico , and is also reported from near the mid-Atlantic island of St. Helena ...
The Large-toothed conger feeds predominantly on finfish. [7] It is used as a food fish in some countries, and is also sometimes caught by fisheries harvesting other species. . The IUCN redlist currently lists it as Least Concern, in part due to its widespread distribution and also partly because its use/interaction with fisheries does not occur throughout its entire range, nor is it thought to ...
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Every so often we hear horrifying stories of modern day cannibalism. In 2012, a naked man attacked and ate the face of a homeless man in Miami.That same year, a Brazilian trio killed a woman and ...
The shorttail conger [3] (Paraconger similis) is an eel in the family Congridae (conger/garden eels). [4] It was described by Charles Barkley Wade in 1946, originally under the genus Chiloconger . [ 5 ]