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Pages in category "Fish of Lake Baikal" The following 41 pages are in this category, out of 41 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. A. Abyssocottus;
The omul has traditionally been regarded as a subspecies of the Arctic cisco Coregonus autumnalis.However, recent genetic studies have shown it actually belongs to the circumpolar Coregonus lavaretus-clupeaformis complex of lake whitefishes, which also has other members in Lake Baikal, [1] and it is now considered its own species within Coregonus. [2]
Lake Baikal [a] is a rift lake that is the deepest lake in the world. ... Baikal fishermen fish for 15 commercially used species. The omul, found only in Baikal, ...
The biomass of the golomyanka population is estimated at about 150 thousand tons, making it the most populous fish in Lake Baikal. [4] [10] It is estimated that about 70% of the fish in the lake are golomyankas. [11] Their juveniles are also the most abundant pelagic fish larvae in the lake. [17]
This entire family is mostly endemic to Russia, where it found in Lake Baikal and surrounding lakes and rivers. Batrachocottus. Batrachocottus baicalensis — Bighead sculpin; Batrachocottus multiradiatus; Batrachocottus nikolskii — Fat sculpin; Batrachocottus talievi; Cottocomephorus. Cottocomephorus alexandrae
Comephorus baikalensis, the big Baikal oilfish, is a species of freshwater ray-finned fish belonging to the family Cottidae, the typical sculpins. This fish is endemic to Lake Baikal in Russia. [ 2 ]
Thymallus baicalensis, also known as the Baikal black grayling, is a Siberian freshwater fish species in the salmon family Salmonidae. Thymallus baicalensis occurs in Lake Baikal , in the inflowing Selenga River and throughout the major Enisei River drainage, and also some eastern tributaries of the Ob River .
Comephorus dybowskii, the little Baikal oilfish, is a species of freshwater ray-finned fish belonging to the family Cottidae, the typical sculpins. This fish is endemic to Lake Baikal in Russia. [ 2 ]