Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Philippine aquaculture is hampered by the lack of a "trash fish" — a cheap fish that can be used to feed farmed fish — as most fish in the Philippines are directly valuable for human consumption. This increases the cost of farming carnivorous fish. Another common impediment is access to juveniles, for fish, crabs, and shrimp.
The live fish trade for food sees the use of cyanide fishing to capture fish. [9] It has also had a direct impact on leopard coral grouper populations. This species is slow-growing, and its exploitation has been linked to localized decreases in average body size. [39] The ornamental fish trade also
The natural habitat of the kuhli loach is the sandy beds of slow-moving rivers and clean mountain streams. They are a social fish and are typically found in small clusters (they are not schooling fish but enjoy the company of their species), but are cautious and nocturnal by nature and swim near the bottom where they feed around obstacles ...
5e Other fish: Wels catfish (Silurus glanis) [182] date uncertain Europe: meat Captive-bred 5e Other fish: Iridescent shark (Pangasianodon hypophthalmus) and Mekong giant catfish (P. gigas) [183] date uncertain Southeast Asia: meat, pets Captive-bred 5e Other fish: Flathead grey mullet (Mugil cephalus) [184] date uncertain California, Colorado ...
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us
The lobed river mullet (Cestraeus plicatilis [2]), also known as ludong or banak, [3] is a freshwater mullet. While it is claimed to be endemic to Cagayan River and tributaries extending through the watersheds of Cagayan Valley and the Santa-Abra River Systems of Ilocos Sur and Abra in the Philippines, [4] verifiable and reliable sources have listed Celebes, New Caledonia, New Hebrides, and ...
In 1991 it was the most abundant fish in Laguna de Bay, the largest lake in the Philippines; by 2002 it was the third most abundant. Sedimentation and pollution contribute to the population drop in the lake. [4] The fish is being reared in captive breeding projects, in which it grows well on a diet of prawn food and tubifex worms. [3]
The fish is a widely popular food fish in the Philippines, and tons are shipped to most of the major cities in the country. Local supermarkets and wet markets usually have a tray or pile dedicated solely to the species. [citation needed] The species is commonly referred to as tawilis in the local language of Tagalog.