Octopus and squid ceviche, salt cod croquettes and pot-roast belly pork and cheeks were all good enough to go back for. |
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It's about two weeks to the close of the cod season, but as they say in the classics, as one door closes, another opens. |
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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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The latest hamper included fresh turbot, hake and cod from Aberdeen Fish Market as well as Arbroath Smokies, smoked salmon and kippers. |
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Robins is certainly not the first to marinate chicken in a Thai sauce, or cod in miso. |
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Once there, they fanned out in two-man dories to set trawls, longlines studded with multiple baited hooks, for cod and halibut. |
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To serve, arrange a cod fillet, some artichokes, and snow peas in the center of a plate. |
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And because cod are a by-catch of haddock, whiting and prawn, other key fisheries should be closed too. |
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The blue cod fishery down there is so threatened that two whole fiords have had to be closed in a rahui, while the fishery rebuilds. |
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Scavengers like the snow crab and American lobster underwent incredible population explosions as the cod stocks collapsed. |
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I like my chips open or wrapped, with a crisp wedge of battered cod perched precariously on top. |
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The vast majority of cod we eat is sourced from sustainable global stocks, traded on an international market. |
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I have seen soft teeth harden after cod liver oil and lots of butter are added to the diet. |
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The fast tides and coloured waters of the Severn Estuary pull cod in like bargain hunters to the sales. |
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Food is straightforward and unfussy, such as mixed grill, barbecued chicken and plenty of cod and trout. |
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Thousands more trout, sea bass, sea bream and cod that lived and died in captivity were also eaten. |
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Citron grills octopus until it's sultry and smoky, then adds opaline orbs of cod cheeks to soak up a rich black-currant-and-caper broth. |
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If we can't get blue cod we can usually get sea perch which are delicious when they are fresh. |
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Wrecked in 1912, it is smothered in marine life and is home to large numbers of wolf fish, whiting and cod. |
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In the years leading up to the crash, the cod had been evolving much like the sheep on Ram Mountain. |
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This was due to the now scientifically proved belief that substantial amounts of cod were a by-catch of prawns. |
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The Portuguese introduced the domestic pig, chickens, olives, and salt cod as well as coffee and tea. |
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It was simple fish and chips with mushy peas, but of a superior quality with excellent cod in a crisp and light batter. |
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Some of our mothers used to bake with lard or render down cod fat and beat it up with lemon juice to provide shortening for baking. |
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Early Europeans cured cod by salting the wet fish on shipboard, but by the later 1500s they were drying and salting fish on shore. |
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Calanus finmarchicus and cod eggs were irradiated under SS for I h, placed in the dark and preserved in anhydrous alcohol. |
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Representatives were holding talks with the Commission in an attempt to save cod fishing grounds from total closure next year. |
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The atmosphere is so clear and unpolluted that the island's fishermen dry their cod catch on long poles in the open air. |
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After cod fishing was banned in 1992, many turned to crabbing and shrimping for their livelihoods. |
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Despite the implications of its name, the lingcod does not belong to the cod family. |
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The chain had been serving 17 tonnes of cod a year, but simply replaced them with fish such as coley, rock salmon, whiting and plaice. |
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Heat a casserole dish or wide-bottomed pan, add the oil and fry the cod steaks for about 4 minutes on either side until golden. |
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Thick, juicy cod fillets are steamed over water that is intensely flavoured with a medley of spices, fresh herbs and aromatics. |
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The cod was excellent, as was the superb oyster, and the explosion of sweet, bright flavour from the cherry tomatoes was sublime. |
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It looked like watery stovies and a forensic examination detected only potatoes, salt cod and a green herb. |
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We used to sell mostly skate, cod and rock salmon but now the Chinese want lobster and Dover sole, while the West Indians want snapper. |
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Hundreds of thousands of tonnes of cod were taken out each year, building up great fortunes for those that fished it. |
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As part of the Lenten season and when rice eventually became a staple in people's diet, vegetables, pulses, and dry cod were added to the mix. |
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Young's Bluecrest is the biggest seafood producer in the UK and has thrown an interesting sidelight on the debate about cod stocks. |
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Nick was less impressed with his cod loin, complaining it was too small while the sauce was bland and lukewarm. |
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It was indeed a delicious meeting of pieces of halibut, cod, salmon, prawns and mussels in a creamy sauce. |
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The cod was a complete success, the gratin bringing this humble dish to life. |
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To be brief, both salt cod and stockfish have their origins in early medieval times. |
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The alternatives to that were cod on samphire, ribsteak of Hereford beef or porcini gnocchi. |
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Monday might be Lebanese roast lamb, seared cod steaks with tapenade, roasted pepper lasagne, baby potatoes with rocket and lime polenta cake. |
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A moratorium on cod fishing off the Irish coast could soon be in place unless drastic action is taken to protect cod numbers. |
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By comparison, the roast cod on puy lentils was more predictable and disappointing. |
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Slabs of cod are battered and cooked until they take on a golden hue, then served with a lemon wedge and creamy tartar sauce. |
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Andre co-wrote half the tracks, including the annoying Insania, and the cod reggae Mysterious Girl, included twice here for our sins. |
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Choose from such delights as char-grilled gigot of lamb with summer bean cassoulet or roast cod with buttered spinach and pancetta mash. |
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But environmentalists claim pollution from cod farms could endanger already depleted Atlantic salmon and sea trout populations. |
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In New England, scrod are very young cod or haddock, weighing only a pound or two. |
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The beaches of East Anglia maybe can't produce the numbers of cod they once did, but there are still good catches taken and big fish caught. |
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This two-person grilled extravaganza includes octopus, cod nuggets, squid, portobello mushroom, eggplant and peppers. |
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The cod filets reminded me quite a bit of the fish sticks of my misspent adolescence, long and skinny and golden-brown. |
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Scientists say that the change in species of plankton, from cold water types to warm water, are less favourable to cod in its juvenile stage. |
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Fished in good weather and sea conditions, over eighteen different species were landed from plaice and haddock to cod and whiting. |
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They seem to have also eaten flounder, whiting, plaice, cod and brown trout too. |
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Alternatively, mackerel or cod steaks can be wrapped in tinfoil with cumin and lime juice and given a quick blast on the coals. |
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Yarmouth North Beach is an ebb tide mark, Caister produces fish on both flood and ebb tides, but any beach will give cod in the right conditions. |
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Their favourite dish is cod and chips, served with a generous helping of salt and vinegar. |
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Lescarbot also observed Mikmaq spearing salmon, sturgeon and dolphins and jigging for cod. |
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These larger animals include the great schools of fish, such as tuna, menhaden, cod and mackerel, which we catch for food. |
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Every year, more than half the cod and haddock in the North Sea were being caught. |
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The cod was traded for slaves who were brought to Jamaica and in turn sold for tobacco, salt and sugar. |
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The pool of bisque was topped with a martini sabayon and I can't ever remember tasting better cod. |
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The advice will cover not just fisheries that target cod in these areas, but also fisheries that catch cod as a by-catch. |
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Other signature dishes include braised cod with a splash of rum and sweet and sour eel on potato chips. |
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We've all heard of the tradition of kissing of the cod and becoming an honorary Newfie. |
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Sprinkle some parsley in the center, set a cod fillet on top and spread with brandade. |
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Other sought after foodstuffs were sun-dried cod, ling and pork that had been preserved in whey, then boiled to rags in its juice. |
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The Barents Sea, north of Norway and Russia, is one of the world's richest fishing grounds, accounting for half the global cod catch. |
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Scientists have said cod in particular is nearing extinction and called for a total moratorium. |
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Add the cream, garlic olive oil and cod liver oil and fold to combine season, and set aside keeping warm. |
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Like other members of the cod family the coalfish has a single barbel, although this is very small and may even be absent in some fish. |
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Conger to over 50 lb, pollack, bass, rays, sole, plaice, bream, mullet, garfish, wrasse, tope, cod and probably a few others I've forgotten. |
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During late August and in September specimen coalfish, cod and conger up to 35 lb have been recorded. |
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Lush strips of pancetta wrap a pearlescent chunk of cod on a crudely appealing bed of pork-rib hash. |
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The sole stock is overfished and it could take between seven and eight years for the cod stock to recover. |
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Not just cod but other groundfish, including flounder, halibut and haddock, were decimated. |
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Salmon, sea trout, cod and turbot are showing signs of reproductive problems, probably linked to the poisons in the sea. |
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Only a handful of cod were caught and those landed were a little on the small side. |
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Oil-rich fish and supplements such as fish oil and cod liver oil are the richest and most readily available sources. |
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When he treated the children with vitamin A, using only the recommended daily allowance of cod liver oil, their chronic ear infections stopped. |
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Eat small meals throughout the day, always have some protein at every meal, always eat your fruits and vegetables, and take your cod liver oil. |
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At least 16 years ago, research published in the medical journal demonstrated the protective power of cod liver oil in pig arteries. |
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Rather than eating fish, which is largely contaminated with PCBs and mercury, consume a high-quality purified fish or cod liver oil. |
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More than half of Irish adults use food supplements such as vitamins, minerals and cod liver oil, the organisation says. |
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A reasonable dose of fish oil or cod liver oil, for instance, consists of 1 teaspoon daily for every 50 pounds of body weight. |
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On the traditional side, I'd recommend the cod croquettes, deep-fried to create a crispy exterior. |
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There's a risk of toxicity from excess accumulation of vitamin A from the sun, dietary sources, vitamin supplements and cod liver oil. |
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Research from the United States indicates that children prone to glue ear could benefit from cod liver oil and vitamins. |
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Maybe I'm some old crank complaining about hills and snow and how kids should take more cod liver these days. |
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Our dear friends, through no fault of their own, ensure that we continue to cod ourselves. |
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The English character actors did their furrow-browed ancient Roman with cod fortitude. |
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The contemporary appeal of the cod memoirs of a parochial clergyman, covering 50 years of his apparently uneventful life, is open to question. |
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Minds doped up on this kind of cod theology have a hard time distinguishing between these men. |
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Oh, the novel has heaps of cod psychology thrown in so the hero is eternally conflicted. |
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Microgadus tomcod is a close relation of the cod but much smaller and found only in the NW Atlantic, from Labrador down to Virginia. |
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Anthony had ordered a plate of pan-seared cod filet in a creamy raspberry sauce with a side dish of salad. |
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But there were no cod left to spawn, and the Irminger Current no longer flowed northwards bringing new recruits. |
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There's an angry man sitting behind her, scowling, moaning, clutching his can of special brew and dispensing his own brand of cod philosophy. |
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The biographer delicately demonstrates the impact of this tumultuous childhood on the poet's work, without resorting to cod psychology. |
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The catch can consist of eels, cod or sprat but is mainly shrimp and these are sold from Brendon's cottage on the beach. |
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Curiously it's metropolitans in Belfast and Dublin who are the most ready to put on cod Fermanagh accents. |
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Murray cod was listed as a threatened species under the Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act in July last year. |
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Following the collapse of white fish stocks like cod and haddock, the town has reinvented itself as the country's largest shellfish port. |
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It is now illegal to fish for cod and lobsters are taken on a strict quota basis. |
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She had roast cod fillet for her main course, which was served with champ potato and petit pois. |
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The cod was wrapped in gravadlax served with carrot and roasted parsnip and potatoes. |
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You can trace history by finding cod bottles, ceramic beer bottles and jars, numerous items of crockery and even clay pipes. |
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A simple example of such behavior was the exchange of pickled fish for the salt cod preferred by slaves in most colonies. |
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Actually, black cod is not cod at all, but sablefish and its sweet, rich flavour was put to good use in this smoky dish. |
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The bulk of cod fishing is done with worm baits, usually lugworm due to the copious amounts of blood juice the lug holds, but also ragworm. |
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It is a well known fact that cod will respond well to a bright and shiny pirk bumped along the bottom. |
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Conservation experts say it spells disaster for cod stocks as talks continued last night. |
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Vicky ordered the king prawn and salmon laksa with noodles, while I went for the cod fillet with chorizo, garlic, spring onion mash and thyme. |
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The moratorium on fishing for cod and witch flounder off the Grand Banks in the North Atlantic is a prime example. |
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For the uninitiated, lutefisk is an infamous Norwegian dish made of dried cod fish soaked in lye. |
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North Sea cod roe and chips weigh in at 140 baht, whilst a red salmon sandwich costs a very reasonable 50 baht. |
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Place a fillet of cod in the center of the plate and garnish with pea shoots, mint, and a lemon half. |
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Place the cod fillets on a flat work surface and cover each fillet with two slices of the ham. |
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The cod form large shoals close to the sea bed where the eggs and milt are released. |
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Nutritionally, vitamin A is found in foods like broccoli, cantaloupe, cod, red peppers, spinach and watercress. |
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Under the proposed regime, boats cannot fish in the haddock zone and cod restricted zone on the same trip. |
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Experts warn that continued intensive fishing would mean stocks of cod as well as other popular fish like hake and haddock might never recover. |
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Even though this rig is especially good for gurnards, it also proves superbly successful for dabs, plaice, megrim, even small turbot and brill, also haddock, cod and whiting. |
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In this scenario, salmon, cod, amberjack, red snapper, and other fish are raised in the cages and are fed ground fish meal from rafts on the surface. |
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For the more adventurous, check out the deep fried soft-shell crab or the cod roe, which are perfect accompaniments to an evening of tasteful tippling. |
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It estimated that the by-catch, cod, haddock and whiting, trapped along with these small fish is about five per cent of the total swept up by these nets. |
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In the twentieth century, cod, striped bass, tuna, and marlin were the principal commercial fish, while anglers prized eastern trout and Atlantic salmon. |
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While the cod, pollack and haddock may have all but disappeared, you stand a good chance of spotting porpoises, minke whales and even the odd beluga. |
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A small inshore member of the cod family, the pouting is one of the most common fish around the British coast and can make up a large percentage of angler catches. |
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However, I don't recall any fuss being made about the over-fishing of North Sea Cod to the degree that there are probably less cod left than there are whales. |
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Sometimes salt beef or salt cod are used, or corned beef or crab. |
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With the virtual extinction of cod in the North Sea and serious problems with hake and haddock, the commission accepted that previous measures had failed. |
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Neither dish sparks like the moist cod stuffed with brandade and chorizo, or the lean but luscious lamb loin accompanied by slices of shoulder braised with citrus. |
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Huge conger, pollack, ling, cod and coalfish were regularly pulled up the steps to the old Angling Centre and weighed in front of big crowds of onlookers. |
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My cod with chorizo is a tried-and-tested combination, with the strong taste of the chorizo providing a pleasing counterpoint to a succulent piece of cod. |
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In some parts of the southern North Sea, cold-water species, such as cod and eelpout, have been shown to experience metabolic stress during warm years. |
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I always played tennis on Saturday afternoons and under normal conditions, Mum would have cooked sweet corn, salted cod or a fry-up of sausages, eggs and tomatoes. |
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Birdseye is replacing some of its traditional cod fish fingers with a new, more readily available white fish found off the coast of New Zealand called hoki. |
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I will even eat the strange species of fish which are being harvested in the southern hemisphere and offered as an alternative to our cod and haddock. |
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While Chicago is humping herself in the interests of literature, art and the sciences, vain old Boston is frivoling away her precious time in an attempted renaissance of the cod fisheries. |
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For culinary purposes, the haddock and the cod are close competitors. |
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He stressed it was vital to avoid repeating the Canadian experience when years of overfishing exhausted cod stocks in the Grand Banks off Newfoundland. |
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Seared cod comes with a soothing pocket of brandade, and roast pork has the pleasure of both brash sauerkraut and toddy-soaked prunes for company. |
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This is a fantastic summer main course, served with a crunchy green salad on the side. Use a firm, flaky white fish such as snapper, cod or sea bass. |
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If you are fishing specifically for pollack, coalfish, cod or bass with strip, slice the mackerel strip lengthways along the dotted line indicated by the bone locations. |
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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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He gave me a Champneys cookbook which was full of healthy recipes such as salt cod with sweet pepper, tomato and olive sauce and sweetcorn and smoked haddock. |
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A few days back, when I had a spot of back trouble, I decided to give my joints a treat and go onto a course of cod liver oil and glucosamine capsules. |
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The key message is the futility of trying to cod us that our various national identities can somehow be subsumed into something called the European Union. |
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The two-page special only ran in their English editions and was otherwise replaced by something else for fear of tarnishing their cod Scottish credentials. |
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We can see through the pseudo-humility, cod philosophy and self-serving attempts to gain a reputation as a staunch supporter of charitable causes. |
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In the tradition of really silly cod spy thrillers, the villains are out to set the world aflame and the spy will have to use lots of high tech stuff to save us all. |
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The actor's cod British accent was perhaps questionable, but who cares? |
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During the 1970s he spent several holidays doing locums on the tiny Orkney island of Papay Westray and serving on a supply ship during the Icelandic cod wars. |
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For the cod place the rice paper sheets on a flat worksurface. |
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His cod is must be among the best in Scotland, large translucent flakes, topped perhaps with a herb crust, a dollop of aioli and black olive tapenade. |
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Huge oysters, terrifyingly substantial octopus tentacles, lightly curried saffron prawns and lobster, crayfish and crab meat, cod fillet and winkles. |
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The winner was a five-and-a-half pound cod while hundreds of anglers caught nothing more than a cold, fighting off biting wind, rain and huge waves. |
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The savory cod served by Nafisi's family was perfumed with lemon and saffron and gently sauteed. |
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A small number of juvenile cod were collected using minnow traps. |
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So we can glug Southern Comfort until our stomachs are pumped but we might need a prohibition on cod liver oil as we can't be trusted not to go wild on the stuff. |
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But the Atlantic cod was by far the most numerous, valuable and important. |
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For the main course, platters of beef satay and chilled monkfish, stir-fried vegetables, jasmine rice, crispy roast duck and blackened cod will be served. |
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There are many cleaning stations here and you will often encounter a large potato cod or pelagics such as jacks and barracuda visiting, in addition to the resident reef fish. |
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The fishermen also blame the seismic work of oil companies, setting off explosions on the sea floor which may be responsible for killing many of the cod fry. |
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The whiting lacks the single barbel of other members of the cod family. |
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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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An ex-girlfriend advised me to take cod liver oil as a supplement to help suppress this, but I can't say that my daily dose has made a whole heap of difference. |
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There is also evidence that oily fish and cod liver oil can help. |
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It isn't actually a cod at all but a member of the skilfish family, and its white, large-flaked meat is sweet and so rich it makes salmon seem lean. |
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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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Wrasse, butterflies, boxfish, porcupines and pufferfish round out the picture, while lyretail grouper, Napoleon wrasse and rock cod mix with regal, map and other angelfish. |
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Unlike salmon, cod fry have no yolk sac on which to survive. |
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These trends were shown both by commercially exploited species such as Atlantic cod and common sole, and others not targeted by fisheries including scaldfish and snakeblenny. |
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Eagles in the 1980s survived for a few years by consuming turbot, cod and walleye pollack either lost from fishing nets or discarded by fishermen. |
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Not only will the cuts apply to cod but will apply also to associated species such as whiting, haddock, sole, saithe, monk, plaice, prawns, hake and megrim. |
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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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As O'Meara has shown, the NP would become viewed through the prism of ideology and cod psycho-politics. |
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This subtly flavoured fish is often compared to Chilean sea bass, black cod and John Dory. |
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Willie Emery from Newbiggin fished the White Hole and, using a combination of lug and rag, took a cod of 9lb 4oz. |
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Some decent fish are being taken around Newbiggin, Billy Foster taking cod to 8lb from the White Holes. |
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Certainly, her work with Dr Macphail saved many thousands of lives and even included a cure for night blindness, using milk and cod liver oil. |
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In the first, a specialist on sipunculid worms was asked for copies of his publications by an Alaskan cod fisherman. |
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So by way of thanks to the lovely folk as the Merchant Bistro, I offer my version of cod with cannellini beans, three ways. |
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Instead, ask for a platter of poached cod and roast pork with crackling skin and pair it with a shot of neat aquavit. |
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The first gave him four cod for 18lb, the next six for 35lb, all on razor shell. |
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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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You'll find all kinds of fresh fish and shellfish in the shop from haddock, cod and turbot to bream, lemon sole and crab. |
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Sable fish, king and sockeye salmon, king crab, halibut, Pacific cod and pollack made an amazing spread. |
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Steve Foster had the biggest roundfish with a cod of 53cm, and Graeme Lunn had the biggest flatfish with a dab of 29cm. |
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From flatfish, Hazlewood has moved into marketing a wide range of roundfish products, especially whiting, cod and haddock for the catering trade. |
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The Piquillo Pepper is a variety of chilli, while the brandade is a mixture of salt, cod and olive oil. |
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Many worship cod and haddock, rejecting anything oilier, stronger flavored or bonier. |
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The potato pancake is an excellent way of showing off the cod without overpowering the taste. |
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They are best served simple and here they were served with cod brandade, pancetta and sage butter. |
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A Norwegian Lutefisk, which is cod that is fermented underground for a few months and considered to be a delicacy in Scandinavia. |
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A new report reviewed records going back to 1919 to examine trends in the juvenile cod caught in the Skagerrak area of south Norway. |
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A NEW cod war is about to break out in Scotland, with a battle between champion chip shops. |
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Thirty minutes later we were munching on the crispiest chips and battered cod we'd ever had. |
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Polychaetes, crangonid shrimp, pea crab, and clams were the most frequently found prey items in Pacific cod stomachs. |
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Growth, gonadal development and spawning time of Atlantic cod reared under different photoperiods. |
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The second course is roasted cod with sundried tomatoes and basil pesto wrapped in Parma ham, followed by peaches in Dolcetto wine. |
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Frustratingly, an explosion of fish-gorging harp seals in eastern Canada has reduced further the cod population. |
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Bob George only had two cod in the box aboard Dunlin when his rod keeled over. |
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Despite the emergence on menus of fancy fish such as red snapper, hoki and shark, cod and haddock still account for 86 per cent of all meals. |
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The three species used in this project included two gadids, Atlantic cod and haddock, and one pleuronectid, American plaice. |
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The majority of our salmon are harvested in the waters of Southeast Alaska, along with our halibut, sablefish, ling cod and rockfish. |
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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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Herring, cod and plaice fisheries may soon face the same plight as mackerel fishing, which ceased in the 1970s due to overfishing. |
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In the early 1990s this finally resulted in the collapse of the Atlantic northwest cod fishery. |
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Oysters, mussels and shrimps were eaten in large quantities and cod and salmon were popular fish. |
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Some common types are cod, halibut, flounder, tilapia or, in New England, Atlantic cod or haddock. |
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Salt cod is a staple food eaten by itself and used in stews, casseroles and soups. |
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Bermudians fished for cod on the Grand Banks off Newfoundland, and were involved in the lumber industry in Central America. |
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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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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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Colonial ships were barred from the Newfoundland cod fisheries, a measure which pleased Canadiens but damaged New England's economy. |
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Herrings, along with Atlantic cod and sprat, are the most important commercial species to humans in the Baltic Sea. |
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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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The front part of the worms body penetrates the body of the cod until it enters the rear bulb of the host's heart. |
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The 2006 northwest Atlantic cod quota is 23,000 tons, representing half the available stocks, while the northeast Atlantic quota is 473,000 tons. |
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In general, depleted populations of cod and other gadids appear to recover poorly when fishing pressure is reduced or stopped. |
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In 2010, Greenpeace International added the Atlantic cod to its seafood red list. |
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In the book The End of the Line, it is claimed cod is an example of how unsustainable fishing is destroying ocean ecosystems. |
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Norwegians traveled with dried cod and soon a dried cod market developed in southern Europe. |
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The Basques played an important role in the cod trade, and allegedly found the Canadian fishing banks before Columbus' discovery of America. |
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Apart from the long history, cod differ from most fish because the fishing grounds are far from population centers. |
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The front part of the worm's body penetrates the body of the cod until it enters the rear bulb of the host's heart. |
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Haddock, along with Atlantic cod and plaice, is one of the most popular fish used in British fish and chips. |
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Coalfish is edible and has commercial value, although it is considerably less valuable than premium whitefish such as cod and haddock. |
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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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The fisheries of the Barents Sea, in particular the cod fisheries, are of great importance for both Norway and Russia. |
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The Barents Sea contains the world largest remaining cod population, as well as an important stocks of haddock and capelin. |
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Shrimp fisheries began in 1978 and intensified toward 2000, as well as cod fishing. |
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For over 400 years, Georges Bank supported lucrative fisheries for Atlantic cod and halibut. |
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Over time, bottom trawlers became very efficient, some catching as much cod in an hour as traditional boats caught in a season. |
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It has been distinguished from other cod species by its lack of the chin barbel. |
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The Arctic cod is widely distributed in the western part of the Arctic basin and the northwest and northeast coasts of Greenland. |
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Arctic cod can be found at depths of up to 1000 m, and frequently under ice. |
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Dry cod may be prepared as unsalted stockfish or as cured salt cod or clipfish. |
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The Atlantic cod is labelled vulnerable on the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. |
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Age of maturation varies between cod stocks, from ages two to four in the west Atlantic, but as late as eight years in the northeast Arctic. |
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The Atlantic cod is one of three cod species in the genus Gadus along with Pacific cod and Greenland cod. |
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One study of a migrating Atlantic cod shoal showed significant variability in feeding habits based on size and position in the shoal. |
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Atlantic cod are apex predators in the Baltic and adults are generally free from the concerns of predation. |
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Without access to cobble, the juvenile cod simply tries to escape a predator by fleeing. |
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Additionally, juvenile Atlantic cod vary their behaviour according to the foraging behaviour of predators. |
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As apex predators, heavy fishing of cod in the 1990s and the collapse of American and Canadian cod stocks resulted in trophic cascades. |
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Overfishing cod removed a significant predatory pressure on other Atlantic fish and crustacean species. |
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This is reflected in the fact that cod more actively search for food during the day. |
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Respirometry experiments show that heart rates of Atlantic cod change drastically with changes in temperature of only a few degrees. |
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A rise in water temperature causes marked increases in cod swimming activity. |
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Stomach sampling studies have discovered that small Atlantic cod feed primarily on crustaceans, while large Atlantic cod feed primarily on fish. |
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Ultimately, food selection by cod is affected by the food item size relative to their own size. |
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However, providing for size, cod do exhibit food preference and are not simply driven by availability. |
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Evidence suggests male sound production and other sexually selected characteristics allow female cod to actively choose a spawning partner. |
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Larger cod males are ultimately more successful in mating and produce the largest proportion of offspring in a population. |
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Parasites of Atlantic cod include copepods, digeneans, monogeneans, acanthocephalans, cestodes, nematodes, myxozoans, and protozoans. |
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Newfoundland's northern cod fishery can be traced back to the 16th century. |
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Restrictions on cod effectively limit fishing on other groundfish species with which the cod swim, such as flounder and haddock. |
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By summer, the young cod reach the Barents Sea, where they stay for the rest of their lives, until their spawning migration. |
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The North Sea cod stock is primarily fished by European Union member states and Norway. |
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Academics have highlighted these following four contributing factors in the eventual collapse of the cod fishery. |
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Another factor important to consider in understanding the fishery's collapse is uncertainty in assessing the cod as a resource. |
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Throughout Atlantic Canada, but especially in Newfoundland, the cod fishery was a source of social and cultural identity. |
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S fishing trawlers took their place and the number of cod kept diminishing past a point of recovery. |
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Many local fishermen noticed the drastic decrease of cod and tried to inform local government officials. |
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This was not due to a rise in cod stocks, it was because foreign trawlers could no longer fish the waters. |
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The 1992 moratorium was at first meant to last two years, hoping that the northern cod population would recover, and along with it the fishery. |
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Even after twenty years, the northern cod population has not rebounded and the cod fishery remains closed. |
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In 1506, king Manuel I of Portugal created taxes for the cod fisheries in Newfoundland waters. |
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They dried and salted the cod on the coast and sold it to Spain and Portugal. |
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In the 1960s some 2 billion pounds of cod were harvested annually from the Grand Bank off Newfoundland, the world's largest source of fish. |
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In 1506, King Manuel I created taxes for the cod fisheries in Newfoundland waters. |
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Lawrence and also created a settlement on Cape Breton Island to serve as a base for cod fishing. |
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For lunch try cod fish croquettes, grilled sardines and egg tarts at Space Lisboa which lies in Coloane. |
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Smaller mackerel are forage fish for larger predators, including larger mackerel and Atlantic cod. |
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Capelin is an important forage fish, and is essential as the key food of the Atlantic cod. |
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In 2015, two reports on cod fishery recovery offered hopeful and cautionary messages. |
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The North American east coast developed in part due to the vast cod stocks. |
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With the reopening of the limited cod fisheries in 2006, nearly 2,700 metric tons of cod were hauled in. |
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The Norwegian Arctic cod mostly occurs in the Barents Sea and at the Svalbard Archipelago. |
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So in the 19th century, dried cod was one of Norway's main exports and by far the most important industry in northern Norway. |
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A notable example is the cod wars where Britain used its navy to protect its trawlers fishing in Iceland's exclusive economic zone. |
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For example, a variety of Atlantic cod called the Skagerrak cod spawns off the Norwegian coast. |
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The bank is an important fishing area, with cod and herring being caught in large numbers. |
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Young Atlantic cod or haddock prepared in strips for cooking is called scrod. |
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In the United Kingdom, Atlantic cod is one of the most common ingredients in fish and chips, along with haddock and plaice. |
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The young cod then move to the seabed and change their diet to small benthic crustaceans, such as isopods and small crabs. |
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The first host used by cod worm is a flatfish or lumpsucker, which they capture with grasping hooks at the front of their body. |
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Recovery plans for cod, sole, and plaice have reduced mortality in these species. |
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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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In Canada, pollock, haddock, and halibut are popular choices, alongside cod. |
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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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Favorite fish include cod, salmon, winter flounder, haddock, striped bass, pollock, hake, bluefish, and, in southern New England, tautog. |
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Despite this, many anglers use this pier for tope, mackerel, cod, dogfish, mullet and plaice. |
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