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  2. Farfantepenaeus duorarum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Farfantepenaeus_duorarum

    The FAO's preferred name for the species is northern pink shrimp; other common names, used in the USA, are pink shrimp, spotted shrimp, pink-spotted shrimp, brown-spotted shrimp, grooved shrimp, green shrimp, pink night shrimp, red shrimp, hopper ("Dettloff brown"), skipper, pushed shrimp and bait shrimp. [2] [5]

  3. Litopenaeus setiferus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Litopenaeus_setiferus

    Diagram of Litopenaeus setiferus. Litopenaeus setiferus (also accepted: Penaeus setiferus, [1] and known by various common names including Atlantic white shrimp, white shrimp, gray shrimp, lake shrimp, green shrimp, green-tailed shrimp, blue-tailed shrimp, rainbow shrimp, Daytona shrimp, Mayport Shrimp, common shrimp, southern shrimp, and, in Mexico, camaron blanco) is a species of prawn found ...

  4. The Suffering of the Gulf Shrimpers: One Man's BP Oil ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/2010-06-29-the-suffering-of-the...

    Prices for large Gulf shrimp have gone up 30% to 40% since the spill. Many restaurants, however, are switching to alternative sources , hoping to appease customers worried about the effects of the ...

  5. Pandalus montagui - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pandalus_montagui

    Pandalus montagui is an omnivore, predator, and scavenger. [1] Its diet consists mainly of small crustaceans such as copepods, hydroids, and polychaete worms. [3] Off the Labrador coast, a large daily vertical migration was found, with the shrimp being benthic in the daytime and pelagic at night.

  6. Farfantepenaeus notialis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Farfantepenaeus_notialis

    F. notialis and Litopenaeus schmitti are together the most important prawn species in an area extending from the Greater Antilles to Venezuela. [4] Production peaked in 1999, with a total catch of 34,900 tonnes (76,900,000 lb), of which more than 90% was caught off Nigeria and Senegal.

  7. Manila Village - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manila_Village

    In later years, other Filipino countrymen arriving in port at Louisiana would also escape Spanish galleons. This group would later found the Manila Village settlement in the mid-19th century (or earlier). The newly liberated sailors became fishermen who caught and dried shrimp for export to Asia, Canada, South America, and Central America.