Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Seriola dorsalis, the California yellowtail is a species of ray-finned fish of the family Carangidae. [2] This species is also known by several alternate names, such as yellowtail jack [3] amberjack, forktail, mossback, white salmon and yellowtail tunis or tuna [4] or by its Spanish name jurel.
The Yellow Tail brand was developed in 2000 and was originally produced for the export market. It became the number one imported wine to the United States in 2011. [3] [4] The namesake of the brand, Yellow Tail, is the yellow-footed rock wallaby (Petrogale xanthopus), a relative of kangaroos.
A yellowtail may be any of several different species of fish.Most commonly the yellowtail amberjack Seriola lalandi is meant. In the context of sushi, yellowtail usually refers to the Japanese amberjack, Seriola quinqueradiata.
Yellowtail, yellow-tail, or Yellow Tail may refer to: Yellowtail (fish), any of several species of fish; Yellow-tail, a Eurasian moth species; Yellowtail moth, a South American moth species; Yellow Tail (wine), an Australian wine producer; Yellow Tail Records, a record label; Yellowtail cribo, a snake species
Global aquaculture production of Japanese amberjack (Seriola quinqueradiata) in thousand tonnes from 1950 to 2022, as reported by the FAO [3]The Japanese amberjack or yellowtail, Seriola quinqueradiata, is a species of jack fish in the family Carangidae, native to the northwest Pacific Ocean.
Its specific name xanthurus means "yellow tail" and refers to the yellow tail which also gives this species one of its common names. [6] Within the genus Apolemichthys this species seems to be more closely related to A. griffisi of the Western Pacific Ocean and the allopatric A. xanthotis of the Indian Ocean. [4]
The specific name flavidus means "yellowish", thought to be a reference to the "yellowish green" colour on the flanks, which Ayres said easily differentiates this species "as they lie in heaps upon the fish-stalls" from the "closely allied" black rockfish (S. melanops) Some authorities suggest that the name refers to the "bright yellow tail ...
Yellowtail snapper have a distinct yellow lateral band beginning at the snout that gets wider towards the forked tail, which is completely yellow. The rest of the fish is an olive to bluish black color with yellow spots above the lateral band. [8] [9] The dorsal fin is yellow while the anal and pelvic fins are whitish. [10] by bony spines. The ...