In the first programme he tackled Clovelly Herring, organic Guernsey beef, an organic veg grower and a Cornish producer of sparkling wine. |
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Herring gulls nest numerously here, as they do at Emery and other points already passed. |
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Herring and other clupeids such as pilchards and sardines have a sophisticated auditory system. |
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Actually, Augustus Moore Herring was quite a pioneer during the very earliest days of heavier-than-air flight. |
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Herring and other fish with primitive swim bladders must surface and gulp air to keep their bladders full and their bodies buoyant. |
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Herring was one of the few foods that were not rationed during the war. |
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Future Islands Samuel T. Herring, the lead singer of this North Carolina synthpop trio, is an absolute force of nature. |
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Hustle begins outside a pub called The Red Herring, a none-too-subtle indication that all is not as it seems in the BBC's latest high-concept drama. |
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Herring himself waffled on the question, so he's no trailblazing leader on the issue. |
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The Picton Herring, a dried fish commonly known throughout the colony, is the Aua preserved by smoking. |
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Herring feed on phytoplankton, and as they mature, they start to consume larger organisms. |
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Herring and plaice are two commercially important species that use the Thames Estuary for this purpose. |
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Herring of different sizes and growth rates belong to different populations, each of which have their own migration routes. |
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Herring are found in the North Sea and the North Atlantic at depths to 200 meters. |
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The Herring Buss improved harvest of herring, and the Dutch also expanded to cod and whale fisheries. |
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Neil Fitzmaurice compered Richard Herring, Lucy Porter, Patrick Monahan and The Boy With Tape on His Face. |
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Police detained Thomas Singleton, 24, Symone Clarke, 22, and Victoria Herring, 25, at a bar in the Costa del Sol resort of Marbella. |
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At Level 4 Ami Herring and in the FIG Championship, Rebecca Tunney and Gabrielle MacDonald battled hard to finish just outside the medals. |
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Herring often move in large schools around fishing banks and near the coast. |
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In 2007, Edwards was appointed Archivist of the Crime Writers' Association, and in 2011 the CWA gave him a Red Herring Award in recognition of his services to the Association. |
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Albert Herring played at the Jubilee Hall, and Britten's new cantata for tenor, chorus and orchestra, Saint Nicolas, was presented in the parish church. |
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Herring are forage fish, mostly belonging to the family Clupeidae. |
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Nick Herring and Olly Mumby gave Berkswell 2nds a 2-0 win against Pershore while Nader Zahrei and Tom Ranner secured the 3rds' 2-2 share at B anbury 5ths. |
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The town has hosted the Machynlleth Comedy Festival annually since May 2010, featuring comedians such as Jon Richardson, Pappy's, Josie Long, Stewart Lee and Richard Herring. |
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The Parnu-based frozen food company specializes in filleting and processing freshwater fish, as well as packing other species including Baltic Herring, Sprats, Cod and Eel. |
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Herring played a pivotal role in the history of marine fisheries in Europe, and early in the 20th century, their study was fundamental to the evolution of fisheries science. |
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In total some 4,500 Dorset servicemen died in the war and of the county's towns and villages, only one, Langton Herring, known as a Thankful Village, had no residents killed. |
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In the 1970s the building was host to an array of Downtown artists, designers and scenesters including Maripol, Madonna, Andy Warhol, Keith Herring, and Basquiat. |
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Richard Herring, Sunday, Glee Club, Birmingham, 0871 472 0400, www. |
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Sohar Port and Freezone spent the day in high spirits, as it celebrated its long-standing partnership with Holland by hosting its seventh annual Herring Party. |
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You can have sea bass, lobster, herring, turbot, sturgeon cusks, haddock, mullet, eels, crabs, oysters and mussels. |
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These are the fatty acids in fish, like salmon, sardines, herring, mackerel. |
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Our focus is on herring, mackerel, anchovetas and other fish for reduction. |
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They're most abundant in fish like tuna, mackerel, herring, salmon and sardines. |
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In Sweden it commonly includes herring, smoked eel, roast beef, tongue, jellied fish, boiled potatoes, and cheese. |
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Trouble began in the spring of 1816 when Judge Cooper built a weir, a fish trap, across the St. Jones River to catch migrating shad and herring. |
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High mackerel, herring, mussel and razorfish are all good, but the best by far is a dried black lugworm. |
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Their diet includes several fish species, such as anchovy, whiting and herring. |
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Leighton Beach has fished well for garfish, herring and yellow-finned whiting and for anglers with limited mobility is not a bad spot to fish. |
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Think teak tabletops covered in lingonberries, herring, salmon, aquavit, pancakes and those cute little gherkins. |
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We've enjoyed aquavit and pickled herring at fine restaurants as well as hot dogs and beer at no fewer than six ballparks. |
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Oily fish such as herring, kippers, mackerel, pilchards, salmon, sardines and trout, contain oils that can lessen the risk of thrombosis. |
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The best kippers start with the best herring, freshly caught in the cold waters of the Atlantic or North Sea. |
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Many a person has gone away smiling after eating one of Kipperman's red herring, bloaters or kippers. |
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Whether it's smoked, pickled or kippered, herring packs more creatine than any other creature on the planet. |
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Simply put, kippered herring are herring that been split open, soaked in a brine solution and then smoked. |
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Allonby was once an important centre for herring fishing, and some of the old kippering houses can still be seen. |
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A related form was the white herring, which was salted without being smoked. |
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Among these clades are such diverse forms as arawanas, knifefishes, mormyrids, eels, tarpon, and herring. |
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But the focus on the 45-minute claim is itself a red herring intended to draw attention away from a far bigger deception. |
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However they were uncertain as to whether it was the address of one of the suspects or a red herring. |
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I had the postcode, the street, a number and a few clues about a jeep but a red herring about curtains. |
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The issue was made as a red herring to detract from the real issues in respect of his management style. |
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It's most often when these kinds of things happen, it's a red herring, it's just a propaganda ploy. |
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We suspect that the Environment Agency is using the issue as a red herring to draw the attention away from their own inadequacies. |
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Yet my own view was that for my particular story, this was a bit of a red herring. |
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Larger salmon eat a variety of fishes such as herring and alewives, smelts, capelin, small mackerel, sand lace, and small cod. |
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The only species of fish that would be ineligible were sea trout, mackerel, launce and herring. |
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Wild fish caught for farm feed include herring, mackerel, sand eels and anchovies. |
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A number of flavouring oils were used by some anglers such as aniseed, herring and pilchard. |
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The primary predators of eggs and goslings at the study site are herring gulls, parasitic jaegers, ravens and Arctic foxes. |
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Some current limits for fish such as tailor, herring and mullet will not change. |
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Oily varieties to go for include salmon, trout, mackerel, herring and sardine. |
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Vitamin D is found in egg yolk, butter and oily fish such as salmon, trout, mackerel, herring and sardine. |
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They carry one capelin, herring, or sand lance at a time to the chicks, making about 16 trips a day. |
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Criticising PETA is a red herring that people use to shift the focus away from themselves. |
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Salmon, mackerel, herring, sardines, pilchards and fresh tuna are the best source of Omega 3 which is rich in Eicosapentaenoic acid. |
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The healthy fats found in oily fish such as salmon, trout, mackerel, herring and sardines appear to help raise HDL levels. |
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Fish high in EPA and DHA include salmon, mackerel, sardines, herring, anchovies, rainbow trout, bluefish and white albacore tuna canned in water. |
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Omega three fatty acids are found in greatest amounts in fatty fish such as salmon, mackerel, herring, sardines, and whitefish. |
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Legered sea baits are proving effective with herring, mackerel, sardine and smelt all worth a try. |
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The Cut at Dawesville is producing big herring, a few skippy, whiting and tarwhine. |
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A piece of prawn or squid bait will attract bites from not only the king george but also sand whiting, herring, tarwhine and flathead. |
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The only other fish to be weighed in were 5 herring, one tarwhine and a few whiting, pretty meager pickings. |
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It's possible it has been deliberately left there by the worm's author as a red herring to lead investigators off the scent. |
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Common names in the English language are ladyfish, big-eyed herring, bonefish, fiddler, skipjack, springer, and tenpounder. |
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It houses Manx shearwaters, herring and black-backed gulls, razorbills, stormy petrels and guillemots besides puffins. |
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I believe this is a red herring that has worked well in past arguments and you keep hoping for someone to take the bait once again. |
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Yields of herring, sea urchin and rockfish also dropped dramatically during this season. |
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The whale's prey includes squid, cuttlefish, herring, and sea stars, or starfish. |
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The freshest herring was salted and sold at good prices for human consumption. |
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Together, they are caught in a mesh of crosses and double-crosses like a shoal of herring thrashing around in a net. |
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His main type of fishing during his years fishing was trawling for herring, white fish and prawns. |
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He has the look of blended simplicity and strength that one expects to see among shrimpers and the crews of herring boats. |
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The latter, however, are very agreeable and good for making pickled or bloated herring. |
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I spotted a chunk of granite in the shape of a bloated herring and grabbed it too, ready to do battle with both hands. |
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Many a person has gone away smiling after eating one of these red herring, bloaters or kippers. |
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The two largest and most important of the herrings were probably blueback herring and hickory shad. |
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Paddling over the six sets of rapids created by the dam removal, you think of the blueback herring that spawn in fast whitewater. |
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Coloration is generally similar to that of the skipjack herring, Alosa chrysochloris. |
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Just as a Bombay duck is a type of curried fish and a Yarmouth capon is a herring, so a Welsh rabbit is a meagre substitute for the real thing. |
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Grey mullet and herring were also salted and dried, when they were known as bokkems, used like Bombay duck. |
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Opportunistic feeders, sea lions will eat salmon, flatfish, herring, octopus, cod, pollock whatever they can catch. |
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The herring season will be ending shortly as the seine netters move off North after the mackerel. |
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Also unlike soused herring, pickled herring is eaten cold-more like Swedish sushi than anything else, I suppose. |
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Unlike soused herring, pickled herrings are raw when put into the vinegar and pickling spices. |
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This buffet meal of cold and hot hors d' oeuvres often includes various forms of herring, meats, cheeses, and vegetables. |
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Although pink salmon and herring catches peaked in the two years immediately following the spill, the two fisheries have since collapsed. |
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Others say it's the healthy levels of sprat and herring which are providing them with plenty of food. |
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Commercial fishing includes salmon, herring, cod, plaice, crustaceans and mollusks, mackerel, sprat, eel, lobster, shrimp, and prawns. |
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Instead of cod, haddock and herring, you could pick up seahorses, red snappers, and leatherback turtles. |
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The bulk of the diet of large congers is made up of small fish, from cod and hake in deep water to mackerel and herring in shallow water. |
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Two types of Omega 3 fatty acids are found in fatty fish such as salmon, white tuna, mackerel, rainbow trout, herring, halibut and sardines. |
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Both herring and candlefish can be imitated with Marabous or weighted or unweighted Clouser Minnows. |
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The cannery is the last on the island, once a world fishery center with 16 canneries that processed tuna, salmon, herring and other fish. |
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The cannery brought in herring from other countries, but capelin had become the major industrial species. |
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Fish that can be found here include coastrange sculpin, pacific herring, halibut, steelhead, dolly varden. |
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It houses Manx shearwaters, herring and black-backed gulls, razorbills, stormy petrels and guillemots as well as puffins. |
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Most of the white fish boats continuing to fish herring with catches varying from good some days to poor other days. |
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A catch of herring hangs on a loop that forms part of the strapwork at the back. |
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The growth of the herring fishing industry in the 19th century put the Broch firmly on the map. |
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Forget salmon, the herring is the sea king for these oceanically compromised times. |
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These fatty acids are found in oily fish such as herring, mackerel, sardines, salmon and trout. |
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Whales and dolphins have followed the herring and sprat shoals into the harbour. |
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A classic Japanese cooking technique, therefore, is to simmer strong fish such as herring and mackerel in sake. |
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When a humpback is corralling herring and other fishes, the net may be 150 feet wide. |
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As soon as de Rosarieux's line hits the water, a mottled herring gull lands on the prow, inches away, waiting for the first fish. |
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Black-headed gull and herring gull belong to the same family and are obviously more closely related than the other two species pairs. |
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The refuse dump-sewage lagoons had the largest numbers of waterfowl, herring gulls, and hoary redpolls, but the lowest diversity index. |
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As the main port in Ireland for landings of herring, mackerel and horse mackerel it is essential that Killybegs has a 24 hour service. |
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This EU ruling has resulted in any landings of herring mackerel and horse mackerel exceeding 10 tonnes being weighed. |
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You will be further pampered by the excellent food served here which include carp stewed in sweet soy sauce, herring and even horsemeat. |
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It is a Russian marinated herring, so we were told by the chef, who used to work in a Swedish restaurant. |
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In the 1820s there were 130 fishermen sailing 35 cobles and five large herring boats. |
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When most people think of herring, they picture it in smoked strips, or maybe pickled in large jars. |
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I simply do not comprehend how a herring in the North Sea can be at risk from a bovine disease. |
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When you buy sardines from France, Portugal or Spain, you're really getting pilchards, a smaller and fatter variety of herring. |
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Another red herring is the search for the main initiators of regulatory excess. |
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The bulk of their diet is made up of crustaceans and molluscs, larger fish become more piscivorous, feeding upon herring and sand eels. |
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In Andrew's day they had drifted up and down the firth lifting nets dripping with moonlight and herring. |
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One outstanding day is remembered by some ever now, when a average of 80 cran of herring were landed by 40 boats. |
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There is a more pernicious red herring that needs to be smelled out forthwith. |
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But the cusk is not fastidious as to bait, accepting clams, cockles, and herring readily. |
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Most assessments on capture-induced skin injury have been conducted on gadoids and herring. |
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The tank features thousands of herring, mackerel, garfish, and horse mackerel, which are found off the coast of Denmark. |
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While I sample a Heineken, an old genever or two and a portion of marinated herring, she is busy ransacking the airport shops for free samples. |
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This stunningly beautiful restaurant features modern Scandinavian cuisine and specialties such as gravlax, herring and caviar. |
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I had marinated herring with gravadlax on a tangle of leaves and thought the herring was particularly good. |
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The gwyniad, which dates back to the Ice Age and is described as similar to a herring, lives in Llyn Tegid near Bala. |
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Through my defiance, and stupid ways, here was I in a duello, and my legs not come to their strength yet, and my arms as limp as a herring. |
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This historic old dock, which only floods at very high springs, was used in olden days by fishermen of the local herring fleet for repairs and for drying of the nets. |
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I love to break the fast with herring and with the very American bagel, lox, and cream cheese. |
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Fish oil supplements are dietary supplements that contain oil from cold-water fish, such as mackerel, salmon, black cod, albacore tuna, sardines, and herring. |
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The fact that some BDS activists are for one state solution is irrelevant here and no more than a red herring. |
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He makes homemade kishke, chopped liver and herring in cream sauce. |
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In late spring, when the herring disappear from the shallows, and head off to sea, the pike have to satisfy their appetites with the vast shoals of the resident coarse fish. |
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Sources of DHA include, salmon, halibut, mackerel, sardines and herring. |
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It features a pickled herring wrapped around pickled cucumbers and onions, and sometimes includes a beer. |
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This is simply a red herring to try and distract angry voters in Hobson. |
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The vehicle has been employed in projects ranging from herring stock assessment in the North Sea to mapping manganese distributions in a sea loch. |
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The sumptuous spread included mushroom soup, pickled mushrooms, boiled potatoes, salted herring, long sprigs of parsley and, of course, plenty of vodka. |
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Breakfast was self-service, with rolls and rye bread and crispbread, hams and cheese, and pots of pickled herring and caviar as well as cereals, dried fruits, and jams. |
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The three-year ban has left the state's environmental law-enforcement officers chasing illegal herring harvesters who have become increasingly more difficult to catch. |
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Chapter One starts with oysters, mussels and clams and subsequent chapters visit herring and shad, sablefish and butterfish, mahi mahi, halibut and sand dabs. |
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Imports of mackerel, herring and scad from Northern Ireland and Scotland are rarely designated as imports, however these are included in the Irish export figures. |
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If, however, they make the journey safely to the West coast of Greenland, they'll soon thrive on a rich diet of herring, eel and the shrimp-like krill. |
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Fish oil supplements are derived from a variety of sources, including mackerel, herring, tuna, salmon, cod liver, halibut, whale blubber and seal blubber. |
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I remember climbing over shipwrecks, bending close to inspect a motionless herring gull, then the long hike away from him, headed north, up the endless beach. |
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Such favourites as herring, plaice, cod, Dover sole, haddock, monkfish, snapper, mackerel, sardines, scallops and tuna are all as wild as cheetahs and antelopes. |
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For a Norwegian combined fishing and whaling vessel, typically 65 feet in length, this means passing the seasons catching saithe, herring, cod and minke whales. |
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In appearance, they are rather like a cross between a chub and a herring with a large mouth and a beautiful bluey green sheen to their small silver scales. |
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After migrating to the ocean, the maturing adults feed on large zooplakton, herring, pilchard, sandlance and other fishes, squid, and crustaceans. |
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Clupeid fish, like herring, anchovies, and sprats, can detect sound frequencies up to around 40 kilohertz, way beyond the hearing range of most other fish. |
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Piquancy is something I value in a fish recipe, especially when that fish is one of the oily varieties such as tuna, herring or, my favourite, mackerel. |
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These in turn provide fertile spawning grounds for crabs, shrimps, scallops, cod, plaice, bass, sole and herring, and so are vital to maintaining fisheries. |
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We lunched at Black Point, on smoked herring, vegetables, breadfruit, and the most unforgettable coconut dumplings, all provided by our good Sailor. |
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Some vessels will change over to whitefish but with horse mackerel and herring fisheries closed many boats have no alternative but to lie idle at quaysides. |
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But what about a bigger selection of cheaper, often neglected but worthwhile fish such as skate, squid, hake, ultra-fresh mackerel, even good old herring? |
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A list of Scotland's top foods could also have included Cullen skink, Arbroath smokies, West Coast scallops, langoustines, herring and Ayrshire potatoes. |
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There is no true sprat in Asian waters, although the name sprat is sometimes loosely applied to certain small fish of the herring family which do occur there. |
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Pork loin glazed with sweet honey, carrots, potatoes and salted herring. |
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I had always associated this fishery with a bay in Canada, in British Columbia, that is closed off with a curtain of seine netting after the spawny herring have entered it. |
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Sources of DHA include salmon, halibut, mackerel, sardines and herring. |
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Moreover, the attention of parents of autistic children has been unnecessarily diverted to a red herring. |
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Koenig makes a big deal out of this call and frames it as a massive red herring. |
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However, if the diet is extremely rich in fish oils, for example, herring, mackerel, sardines and sprats, it may not be necessary to take hemp oil as well. |
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This can easily be mistaken for a kipper, the smoked herring that is on the breakfast menus of many British hotels. |
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This suggests that many were fishing directly from the shoreline with nets for pelagics such as salmon, herring, and mackerel, and baited lines for groundfish. |
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The Omega 3 fatty acids found in oily fish such as mackerel, herring, sardines, tuna and salmon will also thin the blood and help prevent blood clots. |
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Common fish species in the area include atlantic tomcod, mummichog, redfish, herring, silver hake, Greenland halibut, and the dangerously overfished northern cod. |
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Eel, catfish, carp, shad, herring, sturgeon and striped bass have all been fished commercially in the Hudson, and all have been found contaminated with PCBs at unsafe levels. |
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As a member of the herring family, shad, along with salmon and striped bass, are anadromous, meaning they live in the ocean but swim inland and spawn in fresh water. |
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Since shad and herring do not make nests and there was no clear, deep channel to concentrate them, fish tended to move around even more frantically. |
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Lower Fishguard developed as a herring fishery and port, trading with Ireland, Bristol and Liverpool. |
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In the late 18th century it had 50 coasting vessels, and exported oats and salt herring. |
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Farther inland, brook trout, largemouth bass, and herring are sought after, especially in the rivers and icy finger lakes in upper New England. |
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By 1788, Wexford, with 44 cargo ships and 200 herring boats was the sixth busiest port in Ireland. |
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Some of these species are herring, cod, anchovy, tuna, flounder, mullet, squid, shrimp, salmon, crab, lobster, oyster and scallops. |
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Oily baits such as herring, mackerel and blueys are usually best for spurdog. |
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The haul totalled 95 eels, 487 pollack fish, 11 cod, six herring, three plaice, three lobsters, crabs and two long-spined sea scorpions. |
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The 17th century Dutch Golden Age during which Dutch herring, cod and whale fisheries reached an all time high saw Dutch power at its zenith. |
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Pteropods are an important food source for salmon, herring, mackerel, and other fish in the Pacific Ocean. |
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Cod, haddock, whiting, saithe, plaice, sole, mackerel, herring, pouting, sprat, and sandeel are all very common and are fished commercially. |
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For this reason anchovies are often grouped into the general term whitebait, which can also include herring, sardines, and silversides. |
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Cornish peppered mackerel, smoked haddock, Scottish herring and pearl-white skate wings are all laid on a bed of crushed ice at the fishmonger. |
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In June 2006, herring dropped out of East Carolina University. |
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The most frequently wounded fishes were non-native American shad, subyearling Chinook salmon, shiner perch, and Pacific herring. |
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Copepods and other tiny crustaceans are the most common zooplankton eaten by herring. |
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Fishes called herring are also found in the Arabian Sea, Indian Ocean, and Bay of Bengal. |
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Most abundant of all is the Atlantic herring, providing over half of all herring capture. |
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The Alosinae, or the shads, are a subfamily of fishes in the herring family Clupeidae. |
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Atlantic porpoises are thought to follow the seasonal migration of bait fish, like herring, and their diet varies between seasons. |
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Cod and other gadids, flatfish, herring, wrasse and skates are also important locally. |
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Each spring, locals take a lesson from the Native Tlingit and go down to the beach to eat herring eggs straight off sea kelp. |
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It consists generally of mid water schooling fish such as capelin, sand lance, juvenile cod, sprats and herring. |
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Mr Joyce was described as an experienced trawlerman and had been fishing for herring, mackerel, whitefish and prawns. |
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As kids in the thirties and forties, he and his siblings caught crays and herring and silver trevally from the shore. |
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The prey species of the Atlantic puffin include the sandeel, herring and capelin. |
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Nefyn was also an important herring port, and most coastal communities fished for crab and lobster. |
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All fin fish by catch except herring, Pacific staghorn sculpin, shiner surfperch, surf smelt, topsmelt and anchovies must be released. |
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Mallaig is the main commercial fishing port on the West Coast of Scotland, and during the 1960s was the busiest herring port in Europe. |
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The dependence of organohalogen compounds concentrations on herring age and size in the Bothnian Sea, Northern Baltic. |
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The water temperature determines the distribution of Atlantic mackerel and herring, which are the main food source for the northern gannet. |
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Cod and herring stocks have declined but commercial fishing remains important, especially fish farming of salmon and shellfish such as scampi. |
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Blue sharks feed on small pelagic fishes including jack mackerel, northern anchovy, Pacific herring and market squid. |
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West coast fisheries selected were Pacific whiting, market squid, northern anchovy, Pacific herring, and Pacific sardine. |
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Traces of it even lace the eggs of flying fish and Pacific herring, the scientists report in the Dec. |
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The rainbow-backed Pacific herring inhabit shallow waters from San Diego, Calif. |
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Seafood is central to most Icelandic cooking, particularly cod and haddock but also salmon, herring, and halibut. |
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He had no live bait because his panga skipper was late picking him up and the bait haulers were out of sardinas, a local herring. |
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Its early trade was in agriculture, brewing and fishing, with cured salmon and herring being exported to Europe and the Mediterranean. |
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In the animation, juvenile herring hunt the copepods in this synchronised way. |
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The copepods sense with their antennae the pressure wave of an approaching herring and react with a fast escape jump. |
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The analysis of the stomach contents of these fish indicate Atlantic cod is the top predator, preying on the herring and sprat. |
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Sprat are highly selective in their diet and eat only zooplankton, while herring are more eclectic, adjusting their diet as they grow in size. |
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However, they are small in size with a high escape response, so herring and sprat avoid trying to catch them. |
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These copepods also tend to dwell more in surface waters, whereas herring and sprat, especially during the day, tend to dwell in deeper waters. |
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The predators often cooperate in groups, using different techniques to panic or herd a school of herring into a tight bait ball. |
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Water pollution influences the amount of herring that may be safely consumed. |
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The herring has played an enormous role in history both socially and economically. |
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During the middle ages, herring prompted the founding of Great Yarmouth, Amsterdam, and Copenhagen. |
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Furthermore, sprat and herring are considered highly competitive for the same resources that are available to them. |
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Feeding is usually a solitary behavior and their prey of choice includes mysids, shrimp, arctic cod, and herring. |
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Ringed seals may also eat herring, smelt, whitefish, sculpin, perch, and crustaceans. |
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This era established a great herring fishing industry resulting in Scotland becoming a European leader in that industry. |
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Other fishery targets include haddock, Atlantic herring, lobster and several species of flatfish and pelagic fish such as sand lance and capelin. |
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In some years with large quantities of Atlantic herring in the Barents Sea, capelin seem to be heavily affected. |
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Probably both food competition and herring feeding on capelin larvae lead to collapses in the capelin stock. |
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Around Iceland, three separate populations of herring were traditionally fished. |
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The most important commodities, after herring, were sugar and whale oil, the latter from whaling off Greenland. |
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Cod, supplemented by herring and lobster, was the economic mainstay until the late 20th century. |
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The Pequossette built a fishing weir to trap herring at the site of the current Watertown Dam. |
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In the USA, clients are given a preliminary prospectus, known as a red herring prospectus, during the initial quiet period. |
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The red herring prospectus is so named because of a bold red warning statement printed on its front cover. |
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The actual wording can vary, although most roughly follow the format exhibited on the Facebook IPO red herring. |
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There's the blueback herring, ruffe, tubenosed gobies and, the ever-popular spiny water flea. |
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Adam had his huge spotting scope with him, and we quickly picked off herring and great black-backed gulls on buoys downriver. |
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Experts fear the gwyniad, a kind of herring, could be wiped out in Snowdonia's Llyn Tegid because of the growth of a poisonous algae in the lake. |
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Around that time, northern Europeans started fishing Atlantic herring for the same purpose. |
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Fresh Atlantic herring fillets were mechanically deboned to produce a refined mince. |
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Chemical analyses showed that the Baltic fish carried 10 times as much toxic organochlorine contamination as did the North Atlantic herring. |
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They are the state's fourth-most valuable fishery, after lobsters, softshell clams and Atlantic herring. |
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The second management plan establishes a new fishery management regimen for Atlantic herring. |
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The researchers focused on Atlantic herring off Georges Bank near Boston during the fall spawning season. |
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From at least the 16th century, boats from mainland Scotland and the Netherlands dominated the local herring fishery. |
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In the past the basic national dish of the island was spuds and herrin, boiled potatoes and herring. |
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Cod, herring and plaice are abundant fish in Danish waters and form the basis for a large fishing industry. |
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Porbeagles that do turn up in the North East come in late summer, tempted by the returning mackerel and herring. |
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At Portavogie a few mease of herring were landed in June by some twenty-five boats. |
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It was found impossible to drain the bog at Chat Moss, and one of the men on the site, Robert Stannard suggested timber in a herring bone layout. |
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The brutality of Dothraki culture is actually a red herring. |
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Common names for the alewife are gaspereau, river herring, sawbelly, or kiack. |
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The porbeagle feeds mainly on fish such as herring, lancetfish and mackerel but also eats cod, redfish, haddock, squid and shellfish. |
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The territorial European herring gull has caused deaths and serious head injuries to humans. |
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If you're on a tight budget, go for rollmop herring and a schooner of fine Hamburg beer. |
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Mark ordered homemade herring rollmops with new potato and wholegrain mustard salad. |
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Lewes was an important centre of a herring industry and had to pay a rent of 38,500 herrings for its sea fisheries. |
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The islands also have a wide variety of fish, including halibut, cod, perch, sablefish, yellow fin sole, pollock, sand lance, herring and salmon. |
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In Hoonah, Prince William Sound and Bristol Bay, some harvesters go after Macrocystis kelp after herring have spawned on it. |
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They include salmon, trout, pike, muskellunge, black basses, perch, walleye, drum, herring, cod, smelt, flatfishes, and others. |
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Upon sitting down we immediately received a complementary blintz, a flat tortilla-like patty with delicious brown herring sauce on top. |
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They feed mostly on small pelagic schooling fish, particularly herring, capelin, and sprat. |
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Overfishing resulting in the collapse of herring in the North Sea caused porpoises to hunt for other prey species. |
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Some populations in the Norwegian and Greenland sea specialize in herring and follow that fish's autumnal migration to the Norwegian coast. |
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They feed in shallow littoral waters on herring, flounder, hake, anchovy, codfish and sculpin. |
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Puffins and guillemots also suffered from the collapse of the herring population, especially the puffins on the Lofoten Islands. |
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The bank is an important fishing area, with cod and herring being caught in large numbers. |
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The Emile Fournier et Fils market on the Rue Mouron sells mainly smoked fish including salmon, trout, herring and halibut. |
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In the Baltic Sea, cod, herring, and sprat are considered the most important species. |
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Cod is the top predator while the herring and sprat are recognized primarily as prey. |
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Very young herring larvae imaged in situ in the typical oblique swimming position with the remains of the yolk and the long gut visible in the transparent animal. |
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South Shields and Roker piers are producing some good herring and also odd allis shad, identifiable from the herring by having black spots down their sides. |
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Increased farming of large predators, such as salmon and tuna, has led to overfishing of prey fish, including anchoveta and herring, which commonly are used as fishmeal. |
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The third series, due for release on August 11, includes gannet, ringed plover, grey glover, golden plover, greenshank, curlew, herring gull and great black-backed gull. |
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The shallower shoreline waters of the continents and the more temperate islands yield herring, salmon, sardines, snapper, swordfish, and tuna, as well as shellfish. |
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Mycobacteria were recovered from Atlantic menhaden, white perch, blueback herring, largemouth bass, mummichog, striped killifish, summer flounder, weakfish, and spot. |
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Side dishes including pickled olives and herring may also be served. |
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The Norwegian coastal waters are the most important spawning ground of the herring populations of the North Atlantic, and the hatching occurs in March. |
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Upon reaching puberty, herring returns to the Norwegian Sea. |
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Mackerel makes up more than half of the catch in Shetland by weight and value, and there are significant landings of haddock, cod, herring, whiting, monkfish and shellfish. |
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A single juvenile herring could never catch a large copepod. |
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Its main village is Baltasound, formerly the second largest herring fishing port after Lerwick and now the location of a leisure centre and the island's airport. |
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Their duties and responsibilities included overseeing the various fisheries in town including harvesting shellfish, the use of eel fykes, and herring runs. |
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The annual yield from all fisheries worldwide is about 154 million tons, with popular species including herring, cod, anchovy, tuna, flounder, and salmon. |
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In the photo below, herring ram feed on a school of copepods. |
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However, several marine species have populations in the Baltic Sea adapted to the low salinity, such as the Baltic Sea herring which is smaller than the Atlantic herring. |
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Overfishing has decimated the mackerel and herring stocks all around our islands, and now because they are hard to find we are now destroying the sand eel population. |
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Just which of these species are called herrings can vary with locality, so what might be called a herring in one locality might be called something else in another locality. |
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At least one stock of Atlantic herring spawns in every month of the year. |
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During daylight, herring stay in the safety of deep water, feeding at the surface only at night when the chance of being seen by predators is less. |
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