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  2. Juvenile fish - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Juvenile_fish

    Juvenile fish are marketed as food. Whitebait is a marketing term for the fry of fish, typically between 25 and 50 millimetres long. Such juvenile fish often travel together in schools along the coast, and move into estuaries and sometimes up rivers where they can be easily caught with fine meshed fishing nets.

  3. Nursery habitat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nursery_habitat

    Fish, eels, some lobsters, blue crabs (and so forth) do have distinct juvenile habitats, whether with or without overlap with adult habitats. In terms of management, use of the nursery role hypothesis may be limiting as it excludes some potentially important nursery sites. In these cases the Effective Juvenile Habitat concept may be more useful.

  4. Fish hatchery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fish_hatchery

    Juvenile survival is dependent on very high quality water conditions. [7] [10] Feeding is an important component of the rearing process. Although many species are able to grow on maternal reserves alone (lecithotrophy), most commercially produced species require feeding to optimise survival, growth, yield and juvenile quality.

  5. LarvalBase - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LarvalBase

    Whereas FishBase is a database about adult finfish, LarvalBase is a database about the juvenile stages of fish. Juvenile fish often feed differently and occupy different habitats than the adults do. LarvalBase complements FishBase by providing information about these early stages of life.

  6. Australasian snapper - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Australasian_snapper

    Snapper is known by multiple names, including tāmure, a word to describe adults, and karatī, a word describing juvenile fish. [11] There are numerous traditional ways to prepare the fish. One specific to snapper was kaniwha, where the meat would be submerged in fresh water and squeezed numerous times, then eaten raw.

  7. Bigfin squid - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bigfin_squid

    Bigfin squids are a group of rarely seen cephalopods with a distinctive morphology.They are placed in the genus Magnapinna and family Magnapinnidae. [2] Although the family was described only from larval, paralarval, and juvenile specimens, numerous video observations of much larger squid with similar morphology are assumed to be adult specimens of the same family.

  8. Metamorphosis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metamorphosis

    A dragonfly in its final moult, undergoing metamorphosis, it begins transforming from its nymph form to an adult. Metamorphosis is a biological process by which an animal physically develops including birth transformation or hatching, involving a conspicuous and relatively abrupt change in the animal's body structure through cell growth and differentiation. [1]

  9. Fish farming - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fish_farming

    Fish farming or pisciculture involves commercial breeding of fish, most often for food, in fish tanks or artificial enclosures such as fish ponds. It is a particular type of aquaculture , which is the controlled cultivation and harvesting of aquatic animals such as fish, crustaceans , molluscs and so on, in natural or pseudo-natural environments.