Whereas pollock roe could be sold within a relatively short period of time, the rest of the production mainly consisted of finished fillets. |
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Walleye pollock, more than half of all Bering bottom fish, are harvested in the world's largest single species fishery. |
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Species that are usually caught near the ocean's bottom, including cod, haddock, pollock, redfish, halibut, flounder, and other species. |
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The Northwest Atlantic's other groundfish include haddock, halibut, pollock, flounder and plaice. |
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Opportunistic feeders, sea lions will eat salmon, flatfish, herring, octopus, cod, pollock whatever they can catch. |
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On the other hand, I have been invited to fly-fish for pollock and tope off the Mull of Galloway in a couple of weeks. |
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Neo-Basque and traditional French dishes are on offer, like pork fillet mignon with fresh tagliatelle or pollock with olive oil mashed potatoes. |
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Alternatives include MSC-certified pollock, hake, hoki, Pacific cod, sablefish or mackerel icefish. |
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This rule put management of the pollock fishery in the context of the ecosystem. |
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That is the primary method of catching walleyed pollock in Alaska, for example. |
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The jack mackerel is moderately exploited and the Alaska pollock is fully exploited. |
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As a group, these fish are generally darker than pollock, and the proteins do not set into a gel with the same strength and chewy mouthfeel as do pollock proteins. |
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Some of the fish should be firm-fleshed and gelatinous like halibut, eel, and winter flounder, and some tender and flaky like hake, baby cod, small pollock, and lemon sole. |
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Other fish you might connect with are mackerel, pollock and coalfish. |
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Furthermore, these pollock live in a relatively healthy, balanced ecosystem. |
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Use any sustainable but firm-fleshed white fish, such as pollock, gurnard or huss. |
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In the Aleutian Islands region all pollock fishing has been prohibited to eliminate any potential competition with sea lions. |
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What does the story of Alaska pollock tell us about maintaining a more sustainable fishery? |
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What is the Department of Fisheries doing to cut back on the pollock bycatch, the biggest fishery in the world taking our salmon by accident? |
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There are now either limited or no fisheries for squid, plaice, redfish, witch, haddock, hake, pollock, roundnose grenadier, and capelin. |
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Increasingly, pollock and jobs are being shipped offshore, mainly to China. |
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There is no direct fishery for pollock in the Sea of Okhotsk Peanut Hole. |
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Sea fish include dogfish, cod, sole, pollock and bass, as well as mussels, crab and oysters along the coast. |
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The whiting pollock sometimes, par excellence is styled pollock only. On the Yorkshire coast it is called a leet, and in Scotland a lythe. |
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In Canada, pollock, haddock, and halibut are popular choices, alongside cod. |
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Sei is the Norwegian word for pollock, also referred to as coalfish, a close relative of codfish. |
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Sei whales appeared off the coast of Norway at the same time as the pollock, both coming to feed on the abundant plankton. |
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Sea lions rely on fish, like pollock, as a food source and have to compete with fishermen for it. |
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Salmon, hake, Atlantic pollock, Greenland halibut and redfish are among the basics in frozen seafood, as are fish fingers and fish cakes. |
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His seven species score was made up of dogfish, bullhuss, mackerel, cuckoo wrasse, pollock, pouting and ballan wrasse. |
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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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Rich seafood bisque with a seafood mix of prawns, mussels and pollock. |
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Together with Pollachius pollachius it is generally referred to in the United States as pollock. |
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Most pollock are found in deeper water, where scope lengths and, therefore, wingspreads are greater than average. |
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These fisheries include shellfish, pollock, halibut, sablefish, mackerel, and cod. |
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Samples of pollock, sablefish and halibut were gathered from around the state. |
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Favorite fish include cod, salmon, winter flounder, haddock, striped bass, pollock, hake, bluefish, and, in southern New England, tautog. |
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Then again, who needs the real thing when you can have surimi, the crab substitute made of inexpensive pollock? |
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Imitation crab or lobster: Also called surimi, this is a minced fish paste made from pollock mixed with other kinds of fish that may or may not be caught using environmentally responsible fishing methods. |
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But the difference between cooking cod and dogfish and wolffish and monkfish and pollock and haddock and hake and cusk is not all that different. |
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Roseate Terns feed in salt water on small fish, most frequently sand lance but also white hake, juvenile herring, mackerel, gadids, cod, pollock, and haddock. |
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While New England cod have fled to colder Greenland waters, their close cousin Atlantic pollock substitutes perfectly in flaky white fish recipes. |
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Mr. Seaver, a former chef, encourages diners to stray from the familiar to more sustainable — and wholesome — species like pollock, sablefish, Spanish mackerel, haddock, and farm-raised barramundi and shrimp. |
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However, much less is known about the biology of the previously minor species than is known for the better studied cod, haddock, pollock and redfish stocks. |
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Unlike the bluefin, the Alaskan pollock is among the most intensively managed fisheries in the world it is run by America's National Marine Fisheries Service. |
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Moreover, many people go out of their way to eat pollock in the belief that it is a sustainable choice of fish. Last year's data suggested the population was low. |
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It is not that the pollock itself would be endangered at this stage, but Steller's sea lion, which the act covers, might be threatened if too much of its food were being eaten by people. |
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Now the Alaskan pollock fishery has done exactly the same. In its five years, the MSC has certified 14 of the world's fisheries, six of them in Britain. |
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A heavily Asian clientele buys seaweed, dried pollock and live catfish. |
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There are dangers to the gall bladders of fish, and the string bladders of fish, and there are effects of blasting on the migratory and behavioural patterns of herring, haddock, pollock, and cod. |
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For example, in recent years, the tonnage classes 2 and 3 otter trawlers have been placed on an Individual Quota program and the degree of targeting or directing for cod, haddock and pollock has changed. |
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Examples include cod, haddock, pollock, halibut and various flatfish. |
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Many others drowned in trawlnets during the 1980s when sea lions and fishermen targeted on the same schools of pollock. |
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These studies would be most meaningful for the eastern Bering Sea semipelagic gadoids walleye pollock and Pacific cod. |
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For example, as well as traditional cod and haddock, Colmans offers plaice, lemon sole, gurnard, hake, pollock or whiting with your chips. |
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The 10 prey categories were chaetognaths, euphausiids, amphipods, copepods, crab, miscellaneous, and pollock. |
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Atlantic cod, Atlantic herring, red or white hake, redfish, pollock, alewife, and squids were also consumed, but these species varied more seasonally and regionally. |
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We examined the stomach contents of juvenile walleye pollock to explain previously observed seasonal and regional variation in juvenile body condition. |
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In the past half dozen years, science has focused on the effect of acidification on Northwest marine life, including oysters, pollock and tiny sea snails called pteropods. |
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In the northwest Pacific, the overfishing of Alaska pollock and Japanese sardine led fishers to focus on Japanese anchovy, largehead hairtail, and squid. |
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Since then, NOAA said, North Atlantic swordfish and Atlantic pollock have been assessed to be no longer overfished, and swordfish are almost fully rebuilt. |
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Commercial fish species include 6 species of Pacific salmon, Alaska pollock, Pacific cod, Pacific halibut, yellowfin sole, Pacific ocean perch and sablefish. |
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Small boats fishing close into the end of Tynemouth Pier have taken pollock to 4lb, mainly on silver spinners or spoons, though sand eels are taking the better specimens. |
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The whale's name comes from the Norwegian word for pollock, a fish that appears off the coast of Norway at the same time of the year as the sei whale. |
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In this paper we evaluate the methodology and results of the pollock assessments conducted during the triennial surveys as an example of semi-pelagic gadoid assessment. |
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In the Gulf of Alaska, juvenile walleye pollock are one of the most abundant neritic forage fishes and are consumed by seabirds, fishes, and marine mammals. |
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