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#frigate tuna
antiqueanimals · 5 months
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An Artist's Catch: Watercolors by Frank Stick (1884-1966). Edited by David Stick. Published in 1981.
Internet Archive
1.) Atlantic mackerel (Scomber scombrus)
2.) Atlantic Spanish mackerel (Scomberomorus maculatus)
3.) Chub mackerel (Scomber japonicus)
4.) Cero mackerel (Scomberomorus regalis)
5.) Frigate tuna (Auxis thazard)
6.) King mackerel (Scomberomorus cavalla)
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Scombrids of the Netherlands
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atomarium · 22 days
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your ask box wanted an ask in it
do you like fish
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Who doesn't
I like all kinds of fishes
Here is my top 250 fishes
1. Salmon
2. Tuna
3. Cod
4. Trout
5. Bass
6. Snapper
7. Mackerel
8. Halibut
9. Swordfish
10. Sardines
11. Haddock
12. Flounder
13. Mahi-mahi
14. Catfish
15. Perch
16. Tilapia
17. Carp
18. Pike
19. Anchovy
20. Herring
21. Grouper
22. Sole
23. Barracuda
24. Bluefish
25. Redfish
26. Wahoo
27. Pompano
28. Yellowtail
29. Rockfish
30. Bluegill
31. Walleye
32. Whitefish
33. Rainbow trout
34. Lingcod
35. Skate
36. Bluefin tuna
37. Striped bass
38. Marlin
39. Sturgeon
40. Eel
41. Butterfish
42. Wolffish
43. Opah
44. Tilefish
45. Drum
46. Tilapia
47. Gurnard
48. Threadfin
49. Monkfish
50. Opaleye
51. Triggerfish
52. Cutlassfish
53. Pomfret
54. Bullhead
55. Croaker
56. Tautog
57. Sheepshead
58. Wrasse
59. Parrotfish
60. Hogfish
61. Porgy
62. Permit
63. Amberjack
64. Bonito
65. Tilefish
66. Croaker
67. Hogfish
68. Mullet
69. Ribbonfish
70. Drum
71. Saury
72. Tarpon
73. Mullet
74. Bluefish
75. Garfish
76. Wels catfish
77. Gizzard shad
78. Bowfin
79. Stickleback
80. Freshwater drum
81. Sucker
82. Bullhead
83. Sculpin
84. Mooneye
85. Goby
86. Chub
87. Mudminnow
88. Dace
89. Silverside
90. Lamprey
91. Minnow
92. Darter
93. Smelt
94. Sunfish
95. Sturgeon
96. Shad
97. Sablefish
98. Greenland cod
99. Hake
100. Grenadier
101. Cobia
102. Tilefish
103. Pollack
104. Oarfish
105. John Dory
106. Swai
107. Largemouth bass
108. Atlantic cod
109. Kingfish
110. Wolffish
111. Skate
112. Arctic char
113. Goby
114. Lumpfish
115. Gourami
116. Gar
117. Codling
118. Butterfish
119. Blenny
120. Wrasse
121. Roach
122. Rainbow smelt
123. Peacock bass
124. Pompano
125. Pikeperch
126. Minnow
127. Leatherjacket
128. Jackfish
129. Halibut
130. Gurnard
131. Grouper
132. Grunion
133. Grunt
134. Greenling
135. Grayling
136. Gray mullet
137. Grass carp
138. Goldfish
139. Golden perch
140. Ghost carp
141. Garfish
142. Fusilier
143. Flathead
144. Filefish
145. Electric eel
146. Dogfish
147. Doctor fish
148. Dory
149. Dolphin fish
150. Dolly Varden
151. Dogfish
152. Drum
153. Dusky grouper
154. Dunkleosteus
155. Dusky shark
156. Duckbill
157. Driftfish
158. Dragonet
159. Dorado
160. Donzella
161. Dolphinfish
162. Dogfish
163. Dogtooth tuna
164. Dogfish
165. Dory
166. Dusky grouper
167. Dunkleosteus
168. Dusky shark
169. Duckbill
170. Driftfish
171. Dragonet
172. Dorado
173. Donzella
174. Dolphinfish
175. Dogfish
176. Dogtooth tuna
177. Eel
178. Emperor
179. Eleuth
180. Elephantfish
181. Eelpout
182. Elver
183. Escolar
184. European flounder
185. European seabass
186. European perch
187. Flathead grey mullet
188. European eel
189. Eagle ray
190. Eastern mosquitofish
191. Eastern little tuna
192. Eastern mudminnow
193. European minnow
194. European sprat
195. Emperor tetra
196. Emperor angelfish
197. Emperor bream
198. Emporer red snapper
199. Emperor sole
200. Emperor shrimp
201. Emperor scorpionfish
202. Escolar
203. False trevally
204. False cat shark
205. False scad
206. False trevally
207. False cat shark
208. False scad
209. Fantail darter
210. Fathead minnow
211. Fathead sculpin
212. Featherfin squeaker
213. Fingerfish
214. Fire goby
215. Firefish
216. Flabby whalefish
217. Flagfish
218. Flat loach
219. Flathead catfish
220. Flathead grey mullet
221. Flathead
222. Flathead sole
223. Flounder
224. Flying gurnard
225. Flying fish
226. Freshwater butterflyfish
227. Freshwater drum
228. Freshwater eel
229. Freshwater garfish
230. Freshwater hatchetfish
231. Freshwater shark
232. Frigate mackerel
233. Frill shark
234. Frostfish
235. Fuji fish
236. Finescale triggerfish
237. Four-eyed fish
238. Fringe-scale sardine
239. Fullscale sculpin
240. Fulmar
241. Fusilier
242. Galjoen fish
243. Gaper
244. Garibaldi
245. Garpike
246. Ghost fish
247. Ghost flathead
248. Giant catfish
249. Giant danio
250. Giant gouram
What is your favorite fish ? :3
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Not me writing something no one asked for. Anyways, the Mc/reader isn't an adult, but they are originally from the modern world. The MC has a sibling/sisterly bond with the Tempesta girls. This is also all platonic.
As you sleep with Grim curled by your side, thousands of memories swirl through through you mind. One memory in particular repeats itself, the last thing you recall before arriving to the Twisted Wonderland.
In your memory, you sit by the window in you quarters on the Great Royal Fortune, the very name of the sailing frigate amuses you due to Royal Fortune naming said ship after herself. The words of said brunette-haired pirate wishing you a good night as she retreated to her own room echo in your mind. Footsteps slowly approach your door, just before you could stand, the wooden door creaks open allowing a familiar blue-haired ghost ship in.
"I thought you'd be asleep by now, MC."
You look to Mary Celeste, wondering why she's up. Mary seems to sense your confusion, she smiles softly.
"Nightmares have been keeping me up lately. I... Well, you know me and fire don't mix well."
Mary sighs, you quickly respond,
"I see, are you alright?"
You tilt your head slightly, Mary softly smiles and nods.
"Yeah... Sometimes I forget I'm a seaborne ghost and not just a ship. I may be old compared to you, but those scars are still very young."
Mary speaks, the emotions in her eyes reflecting the turmoil within her mind. You decide to tell her why you weren't sleeping.
"I couldn't sleep either, the storm we went through while fighting the Si- I mean, the Echo Fleet has me on edge. I thought I'd count the stars to try and fall asleep, just like counting sheep."
Mary softly chuckles at your words, she leaves your quarters for a few moments leaving you confused. The ghost ship returns quickly with a small and light wooden chair, most likely from her quarters.
"Mind if I join you?"
You nod as Mary hands you the blanket off your bed to ensure your body isn't chilled by her ghostly presence. You wrap your blanket around your shoulders as Mary soon sits beside you, the two of you counting stars together until you slip into a peaceful slumber, Mary having fallen asleep a few minutes after sitting down with you.
Every part of you misses the chaos, small fights, and joy aboard the Great Royal Fortune. Mary chasing Whydah around, Adventure Galley being her grumpy self, São Martinho watching the waves for danger, Golden Hind making new business plans, and Royal Fortune cheerfully talking your ear off while happily guiding the large sailing frigate through the vast ocean.
Before you can reminisce any further, you feel something poking and prodding at your face, and Grim's voice soon echoing throughout the room.
"Hench-human! Wake up! You have to feed me my tuna! I don't want to go to school without food. I won't become the greatest mage on an empty stomach!"
Grim yowls as you slowly awaken, softly yawning.
"I know, I know... I'm awake, Grim. Let me get changed and I'll feed you."
You reply as Grim rushes to the kitchen. You soon begin changing into your school, but you pause when you see something in the pants pocket of your old clothes, the clothing you were wearing when you arrived to Twisted Wonderland.
You reach your hand into the pocket and pull out the golden compass Royal Fortune had given you, the very item brings back both good and bad memories. You place the compass down to finish changing into your uniform, as soon as your finished you place the small object into your pocket and head to the kitchen where Grim is waiting impatiently.
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margodraws · 7 years
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Breaking in some new markers with a full-colour mermaid. She fights sharks, probably.
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Borreta, a soup from the the south of the Valencian Country, especially from the mountains of Alcoi. It’s very easy to make and its main ingredients are potatoes, spinach, dry bell peppers, and a salted fish (usually cod but it can also be frigate tuna), and an egg.
In the area, it’s traditional to eat this dish on the day of Good Friday.
Photos from eltercerbrazo.com and mercadocalabajio.com.
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galbium · 3 years
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The full book title contains 3777 words and reads as follows: 'The historical development of the Heart i.e. from its formation from Annelida: Clam worm, Seamouse, Lugworm, Megascolex, Tubifex, Pheretima, Freshwater leech, marine leech, land leech. Arthropoda: Ladybird, Krill, Rock Barnacle, Root-headed Barnacle, Copepod, Silverfish, Cairns birdwing, Silver - spotted skipper, Scutigera, Cray fish, Large white, Andonis blue, Camberwell beauty, Tiger swallowtail, Regent skipper, Black – veined white, Green – underside blue, Blue Morpho, Apollo, Guava skipper, Cleopatra, Large copper, Millipede, Orb spider, Black widow spider, Giant crab spider, Wolf spider, Bird – eating spider, Tenebrionid beetle, Green Tiger beetle, African goliath beetle, Scolopendra, Diving beetle, African ground beetle, New guinea weevil, Barnacle, Lobster, Shrimp, Woodlice, Mite, Prawn, Housefly, Butterfly, Monarch butterfly, Peacock butterfly, Honey bee, Fairy shrimp, Horsehoe crab, Tick, Bluebootle, Froghopper, Yellow crazy ant, Water flea, Sea spider, Fiddler crab, Shiny spider crab, Hermit crab, Sail swallowtail, Red admiral, Morpho butterfly, Desert locust, Stephens island weta, Speckled bush cricket, Mole cricket, Dung – beetle, Euthalia ynipardus, Small blues, Termite, Hornet, Mosquito, Garden spider, Tarantula, Desert hairy scorpion, Emperor dragon – fly, Moth, Centipede, Wood ant, Stag beetle, Indian red admiral, Blue admiral, Harvestman, Hoverfly, Shield bug, Assassin bug, Cicada, Coreid bug, Rose aphid, Water – boatman, Wasp, June bug, Large tortoiseshell, Frog beetle, Mexican red – legged tarantula, Paintedlady, Sydney funnelweb spider, Small tortoiseshell, Mountain bumble bee, Trapdoor spider, Jumping spider, Daddy longlegs spider, Orchind bee, Asian carpenter bee, Parasitic bee, House spider, Giant longhorn beetle, Flea, Bedbug Beetle, Cockroach, Scorpion, Spider, Ant, Gnats, Grasshopper, Silver fish, Crab, Great green bush cricket, Elephant hawk – moth. Mollusca: Neomenia, Chaetoderma, Chiton, Lepidopleurus, Apple snail, Sea hare, Sea lemon, Dentalium, Freshwater mussel, Marine mussel, Pearl oyster, Cuttlefish, Giant squid, Chambered fish, Devilfish. Fishes or Pisces: African glass catfish, African lungfish, Aholehole, Airbreathing catfish, Alaska blackfish, Albacore, Alewife, Alfonsino, Algae eater, Alligatorfish, Alligator gar, Amberjack - Seriola dumerili, American sole, Amur pike, Anchovy, Anemonefish, Angelfish, Angler, Angler catfish, Anglerfish, Antarctic cod, Antarctic icefish, Antenna codlet, Arapaima, Archerfish, Arctic char, Armored gurnard, Armored searobin, Armorhead, Armorhead catfish, Armoured catfish, Arowana, Arrowtooth eel, Asian carps, Asiatic glassfish, Atka mackerel, Atlantic Bonito (Sarda sarda), Atlantic cod, Atlantic herring, Atlantic salmon, Atlantic Sharpnose Shark - Rhizoprioltodon terraenovae, Atlantic saury, Atlantic silverside, Australasian salmon, Australian grayling, Australian herring, Australian lungfish, Australian prowfish, Ayu, Baikal oilfish, Bala shark, Ballan wrasse, Bamboo shark, Banded killifish, Bandfish, Banjo, Bangus, Banjo catfish, Bank Sea Bass, Barb, Barbel, Barbeled dragonfish, Barbeled houndshark, Barbel-less catfish, Barfish, Barracuda, Barracudina, Barramundi, Barred danio, Barreleye, Basking shark, Bass, Basslet, Batfish, Bat ray, Beachsalmon, Beaked salmon, Beaked sandfish, Beardfish, Beluga sturgeon, Bengal danio, Betta, Bichir, Bicolor goat fish, Bigeye, , Bighead carp, Bigmouth buffalo, Bigscale, Billfish, Bitterling, Black angelfish, Black bass, Black dragonfish, Blackchin, Blackfin Tuna - Thunnus atlanticus, Blackfish, Black neon tetra, Blacktip reef shark, Black mackerel, Black scalyfin, Black sea bass, Black scabbardfish, Black swallower, Black tetra, Black triggerfish, Bank Sea Bass aka Yellow Sea Bass - Centropristis ocyurus, Bleak, Blenny, Blind goby, Blind shark, Blobfish, Blueline Tilefish, Blowfish, Blue catfish, Blue danio, Blue-redstripe danio, Blueline Tilefish , Blue eye, Bluefin tuna, Bluefish, Bluegill, Blue gourami, Blue shark, Blue triggerfish, Blue whiting, Bluntnose knifefish, Bluntnose minnow, Boafish, Boarfish, Bobtail snipe eel, Bocaccio, Boga, Bombay duck, Bonefish, Bonito, Bonnetmouth, Bonytail chub, Bronze corydoras, Bonytongue, Bowfin, Boxfish, Bramble shark, Bream, Brill, Bristlemouth, Bristlenose catfish, Broadband dogfish, Brook lamprey, Brook trout, Brotula, Brown trout, Buffalo fish, Bullhead, Bullhead shark, Bull shark, Bull trout, Burbot, Bumblebee goby, Buri, Burma danio, Burrowing goby, Butterfish, Butterfly ray, Butterflyfish, California flyingfish, California halibut, Canary rockfish, Candiru, Candlefish, Capelin, Cardinalfish, Cardinal tetra, Carp, Carpetshark, Carpsucker, Catalufa, Catfish, Catla, Cat shark, Cavefish, Celebes rainbowfish, Central mudminnow, Chain pickerel, Channel bass, Channel catfish, Char, Cherry salmon, Chimaera, Chinook salmon, Cherubfish, Chub, Chubsucker, Chum salmon, Cichlid, Cisco, Climbing catfish, Climbing gourami, Climbing perch, Clingfish, Clownfish, Clown loach, Clown triggerfish, Cobbler, Cobia, Cod, Codlet, Codling, Coelacanth, Coffinfish, Coho salmon, Coley, Collared carpetshark, Collared dogfish, Colorado squawfish, Combfish, Combtail gourami, Common carp, Common tunny, Conger eel, Convict blenny, Convict cichlid, Cookie-cutter shark, Coolie loach, Cornetfish, Cowfish, Cownose ray, Cow shark, Crappie, Creek chub, Crestfish, Crevice kelpfish, Croaker, Crocodile icefish, Crocodile shark, Crucian carp, Cuckoo wrasse, Cusk, Cusk-eel, Cutlassfish, Cutthroat eel, Cutthroat trout, Dab, Dace, Desert pupfish, Devario, Devil ray, Dhufish, Discus, Diver: New Zealand sand diver or long-finned sand diver, Dogfish, Dogfish shark, Dogteeth tetra, Dojo loach, Dolly Varden trout, Dolphin fish - Corypaena hippurus, Dorab, Dorado, Dory, Dottyback, Dragonet, Dragonfish, Dragon goby, Driftfish, Driftwood catfish, Drum, Duckbill, Duckbill eel, Dusky grouper, Dusky Shark - Carcharhinus obscurus, Dwarf gourami, Dwarf loach, Eagle ray, Earthworm eel, Eel, Eel cod, Eel-goby, Eelpout, Eeltail catfish, Elasmobranch, Electric catfish, Electric eel, Electric knifefish, Electric ray, Elephant fish, Elephantnose fish, Elver, Ember parrotfish, Emerald catfish, Emperor angelfish, Emperor bream, Escolar, Eucla cod, Eulachon, European chub, European eel, European flounder, European minnow, European perch, False brotula, False cat shark, False moray, Fangtooth, Fathead sculpin, Featherback, Fierasfer, Fire goby, Filefish, Finback cat shark, Fingerfish, Firefish, Flabby whale fish, Flagblenny, Flagfin, Flagfish, Flagtail, Flashlight fish, Flatfish, Flathead, Flathead catfish, Flier, Flounder, Flying gurnard, Flying fish, Footballfish, Forehead brooder, Four-eyed fish, French angelfish, Freshwater eel, Freshwater hatchetfish, Freshwater shark, Frigate mackerel, Frilled shark, Frogfish, Frogmouth catfish, Fusilier fish, Galjoen fis, Ganges shark, Geel, Garibaldi, Garpike, Ghost fish, Ghost flathead, Ghost knifefish, Ghost pipefish, Ghost shark, Ghoul, Giant danio, Giant gourami, Giant sea bass, Gibberfish, Gila trout, Gizzard shad, Glass catfish, Glassfish, Glass knifefish, Glowlight danio, Goatfish, Goblin shark, Goby, Golden dojo, Golden loach, Golden shiner, Golden trout, Goldeye, Goldfish, Gombessa, Goosefish, Gopher rockfish, Gourami, Grass carp, Graveldiver, Grayling, Gray mullet, Gray reef shark, Great white shark, Green swordtail, Greeneye, Greenling, Grenadier, Green spotted puffer, Ground shark, Grouper, Grunion, Grunt, Grunter, Grunt sculpin, Gudgeon, Guitarfish, Gulf menhaden, Gulper eel, Gulper, Gunnel, Guppy, Gurnard, Haddock, Hagfish, Hairtail, Hake, Halfbeak, Halfmoon, Halibut, Halosaur, Hamlet, Hammerhead shark, Hammerjaw, Handfish, Hardhead catfish, Harelip sucker, Hatchetfish, Hawkfish, Herring, Herring smelt, Hickory Shad, Horn shark, Horsefish, Houndshark, Huchen, Humuhumunukunukuapua'a, Hussar, Icefish, Ide, Ilisha, Inanga, Inconnu, Jack, Jackfish, Jack Dempsey, Japanese eel, Javelin, Jawfish, Jellynose fish, Jewelfish, Jewel tetra, Jewfish, John Dory, Kafue pike, Kahawai, Kaluga, Kanyu, Kelp perch, Kelpfish, Killifish, King of the herrings, Kingfish, King-of-the-salmon, Kissing gourami, Knifefish, Knifejaw, Koi, Kokanee, Kokopu, Kuhli loach, Labyrinth fish, Ladyfish, Lake chub, Lake trout, Lake whitefish, Lampfish, Lamprey, Lanternfish, Largemouth bass, Leaffish, Lefteye flounder, Lemon shark, Lemon sole, Lemon tetra, Lenok, Leopard danio, Lightfish, Limia, Lined sole, Ling, Ling cod, Lionfish, Livebearer, Lizardfish, Loach, Loach catfish, Loach goby, Loach minnow, Longfin, Longfin dragonfish, Longfin escolar, Longfin smelt, Long-finned char, Long-finned pike, Longjaw mudsucker, Longneck eel, Longnose chimaera, Longnose dace, Longnose lancetfish, Longnose sucker, Longnose whiptail catfish, Long-whiskered catfish, Loosejaw, Lost River sucker, Louvar, Loweye catfish, Luderick, Luminous hake, Lumpsucker, Lungfish, Mackerel, Mackerel shark, Madtom, Mahi-mahi, Mahseer, Mail-cheeked fish, Mako shark, Mandarinfish, Masu salmon, Medaka, Medusafish, Megamouth shark, Menhaden, Merluccid hake, Mexican golden trout, Midshipman fish, Milkfish,, Minnow, Minnow of the deep, Modoc sucker, Mojarra, Mola, Monkeyface prickleback, Monkfish, Mooneye, Moonfish, Moorish idol, Mora, Moray eel, Morid cod, Morwong, Moses sole, Mosquitofish, Mouthbrooder, Mozambique tilapia, Mrigal, Mud catfish (Mud cat), Mudfish, Mudminnow, Mud minnow, Mudskipper, Mudsucker, Mullet, Mummichog, Murray cod, Muskellunge, Mustache triggerfish, Mustard eel, Naked-back knifefish, Nase, Needlefish, Neon tetra, New World rivuline, New Zealand smelt, Nibble fish, Noodlefish, North American darter, North American freshwater catfish, North Pacific daggertooth, Northern anchovy, Northern clingfish, Northern lampfish, Northern pike, Northern sea robin, Northern squawfish, Northern stargazer, Notothen, Nurseryfish, Nurse shark, Oarfish, Ocean perch, Ocean sunfish, Oceanic whitetip shark, Oilfish, Oldwife, Old World knifefish, Olive flounder, Opah, Opaleye, Orange roughy, Orangespine unicorn fish, Orangestriped triggerfish, Orbicular batfish, Orbicular velvetfish, Oregon chub, Orfe, Oriental loach, Oscar, Owens pupfish, Pacific albacore, Pacific cod, Pacific hake, Pacific herring, Pacific lamprey, Pacific salmo, Pacific saury, Pacific trout, Pacific viperfish, Paddlefish, Pancake batfish, Panga, Paradise fish, Parasitic catfish, Parore, Parrotfish, Peacock flounder, Peamouth, Pearleye, Pearlfish, Pearl danio, Pearl perch, Pelagic cod, Pelican eel, Pelican gulper, Pencil catfish, Pencilfish, Pencilsmelt, Peppered corydoras, Perch, Peters' elephantnose fish, Pickerel, Pigfish, Pike conger, Pike eel, Pike, Pikeblenny, Pikeperch, Pilchard, Pilot fish, Pineapplefish, Pineconefish, Pink salmon, Píntano, Pipefish, Piranha, Pirarucu, Pirate perch, Plaice, Platy, Platyfish, Pleco, Plownose chimaera, Poacher, Pollock, Pomfret, Pompano dolphinfish, Ponyfish, Popeye catalufa, Porbeagle shark, Porcupinefish, Porgy, Port Jackson shark, Powen, Prickleback, Pricklefish, Prickly shark, Prowfish, Pufferfish, Pumpkinseed, Pupfish, Pygmy sunfish, Queen danio, Queen parrotfish, Queen triggerfish, Quillback, Quillfish, Rabbitfish, Raccoon butterfly fish, Ragfish, Rainbow trout, Rainbowfish, Rasbora, Ratfish, Rattail, Ray, Razorback sucker, Razorfish, Red Grouper, Red salmon, Red snapper, Redfin perch, Redfish, Redhorse sucker, Redlip blenny, Redmouth whalefish, Redtooth triggerfish, Red velvetfish, Red whalefish, Reedfish, Reef triggerfish, Remora, Requiem shark, Ribbon eel, Ribbon sawtail fish, Ribbonfish, Rice eel, Ricefish, Ridgehead, Riffle dace, Righteye flounder, Rio Grande perch, River loach, River shark, River stingray, Rivuline, Roach, Roanoke bass, Rock bass, Rock beauty, Rock cod, Rocket danio, Rockfish, Rockling, Rockweed gunnel, Rohu, Ronquil, Roosterfish, Ropefish, Rough scad, Rough sculpin, Roughy, Roundhead, Round herring, Round stingray, Round whitefish, Rudd, Rudderfish, Ruffe, Russian sturgeon, Sábalo, Sabertooth, Saber-toothed blenny, Sabertooth fish, Sablefish, Sacramento blackfish, Sacramento splittail, Sailfin silverside, Sailfish, Salamanderfish, Salmon, Salmon shark, Sandbar shark, Sandburrower, Sand dab, Sand diver, Sand eel, Sandfish, Sand goby, Sand knifefish, Sand lance, Sandperch, Sandroller, Sand stargazer, Sand tiger, Sand tilefish, Sandbar Shark - Carchathinus plumbeus, Sarcastic fringehead, Sardine, Sargassum fish, Sauger, Saury, Sawfishm, Saw shark, Sawtooth eel, Scabbard fish, Scaly dragonfish, Scat, Scissortail rasbora, Scorpionfish, Sculpin, Scup, Sea bass, Sea bream, Sea catfish, Sea chub, Sea devil, Sea dragon, Sea lamprey, Sea raven, Sea snail, Sea toad, Seahorse, Seamoth, Searobin, Sevan trout, Sergeant major, Shad, Shark, Sharksucker, Sharpnose puffer, Sheatfish, Sheepshead, Sheepshead minnow, Shiner, Shortnose chimaera, Shortnose sucker, Shovelnose sturgeon, Shrimpfish, Siamese fighting fish, Sillago, Silver carp, Silver dollar, Silver dory, Silver hake, Silverside, Silvertip tetra, Sind danio, Sixgill ray, Sixgill shark, Skate, Skilfish, Skipjack tuna, Slender mola, Slender snipe eel, Sleeper, Sleeper shark, Slickhead, Slimehead, Slimy mackerel, Slimy sculpin, Slipmouth, Smalleye squaretail, Smalltooth sawfish, Smelt, Smelt-whiting, Smooth dogfish, Snailfish, Snake eel, Snakehead, Snake mackerel, Snapper, Snipe eel, Snipefish, Snoek, Snook, Snubnose eel, Snubnose parasitic eel, Sockeye salmon, Soldierfish, Sole, South American darter, South American lungfish, Southern Dolly Varden, Southern flounder, Southern hake, Southern sandfish, Southern smelt, Spadefish, Spaghetti eel, Spanish mackerel, Spearfish, Speckled trout, Spiderfish, Spikefish, Spinefoot, Spiny basslet, Spiny dogfish, Spiny dwarf catfish, Spiny eel, Spinyfin, Splitfin, Spookfish, Spotted climbing perch, Spotted danio, Spottail Pinfish - Diplodus holbrooki, Sprat, Springfish, Squarehead catfish, Squaretail, Squawfish, Squeaker, Squirrelfish, Staghorn sculpin, Stargazer, Starry flounder, Steelhead, Stickleback, Stingfish, Stingray, Stonecat, Stonefish, Stoneroller minnow, Stream catfish, Striped bass, Striped burrfish, Sturgeon, Sucker, Suckermouth armored catfish, Summer flounder, Sundaland noodlefish,Sunfish, Surf sardine, Surfperch, Surgeonfish, Swallower, Swamp-eel, Swampfish, Sweeper, Swordfish, Swordtail, Tadpole cod, Tadpole fish, Tailor, Taimen, Tang, Tapetail, Tarpon, Tarwhine, Telescopefish, Temperate bass, Temperate perch, Tenpounder, Tenuis, Tetra, Thorny catfish, Thornfish, Threadfin, Threadfin bream, Thread-tail, Three spot gourami, Threespine stickleback, Three-toothed puffer, Thresher shark, Tidewater goby, Tiger barb, Tigerperch, Tiger shark, Tiger shovelnose catfish, Tilapia, Tilefish, Titan triggerfish, Toadfish, Tommy ruff, Tompot blenny, Tonguefish, Tope, Topminnow, Torpedo, Torrent catfish, Torrent fish, Trahira, Treefish, Trevally, Triggerfish, Triplefin blenny, Triplespine, Tripletail, Tripod fish, Trout, Trout cod, Trout-perch, Trumpeter, Trumpetfish, Trunkfish, Tubeblenny, Tube-eye, Tube-snout, Tubeshoulder, Tui chub, Tuna, Turbot, Two spotted goby, Uaru, Unicorn fish, Upside-down catfish, Vanjaram, Velvet belly lanternshark, Velvet catfish, Velvetfish, Vermillion Snapper - Rhomboplites aurorubens, Vimba, Viperfish, Wahoo, Walking catfish, Wallago, Walleye, Walleye Pollock, Walu, Warmouth, Warty angler, Waryfish, Waspfish, Weasel shark, Weatherfish, Weever, Weeverfish, Wels catfish, Whale catfish, Whalefish, Whale shark, Whiff, Whitebait, White croaker, Whitefish, White marlin, White shark, Whitetip reef shark, Whiting, Wobbegong, Wolf-eel, Wolffish, Wolf-herring, Worm eel, Wormfish, Wrasse, Wrymouth, X-ray fish, Yellowback fusilier, Yellowbanded perch, Yellow bass, Yellowedge grouper (Hyporthodus flavolimbatus), Yellow-edged moray, Yellow-eye mullet, Yellowhead jawfish, Yellowfin croaker, Yellowfin cutthroat trout, Yellowfin grouper, Yellowfin Tuna - Thunnus albacares, Yellowfin pike, Yellowfin surgeonfish, Yellowfin tuna, Yellowmargin triggerfish, Yellow moray, Yellow perch, Yellowtail, Yellowtail amberjack, Yellowtail barracuda, Yellowtail clownfish, Yellowtail horse mackerel, Yellowtail kingfish, Yellowtail snapper, Yellow tang, Yellow weaver, Yellowtail catfish, Zander, Zebra bullhead shark, Zebra danio, Zebrafish, Zebra lionfish, Zebra loach, Zebra oto, Zebra pleco, Zebra shark, Zebra tilapia, Zebra turkeyfish, Ziege, Zingel. Amphibians: Frogs and Toads, Painted frogs, Disc tongued frogs, Fire Belly toads, Litter frogs, European Spadefoot toads, Parsley frogs, Tongueless frogs, Clawed frogs, Mexican Burrowing Toad, American spadefoot toads, Screeching frogs, True toads, Glass Frogs, Poison dart frogs, Ghost frogs, Shovelnose frogs, Tree frogs, Sedge frogs, Southern frogs, Narrow-mouthed frogs, Australian ground frogs, True frogs, Moss frogs, Seychelles frog, Giant Salamanders, Asiatic Salamanders, Mole Salamanders, Pacific giant salamanders, Amphiumas, Lungless salamanders, Mudpuppies and Waterdogs, Torrent salamanders, True salamanders and Newts, Sirens, Common caecilians, Fish caecilians, Beaked caecilians. Reptiles: Turtles, common snapping turtles and alligator snapping turtle, pond turtles and box turtles, tortoises, Asian river turtles and allies, pignose turtles, softshell turtles, river turtles, mud turtles, sea turtles, leatherback turtles, tuataras, scaled reptiles, agamas, chameleons, casquehead lizard, iguanas, Madagascar iguanids, collared and leopard lizards, horned lizards, anoles, wood lizards, Neotropical ground lizards, geckos, legless lizards, blind lizards, spinytail Lizards, plated lizards, spectacled lizards, whiptails and tegus, Lacertids, skinks, night lizards, glass lizards, American legless lizards, knob-scaled lizards, gila monsters, earless Monitor lizards, monitor lizards, worm Lizards, shorthead Worm Lizards, two-legged Worm Lizards, snakes, wart snakes, false coral snakes, dwarf pipe snakes, African burrowing asps, stiletto snakes, boas, anacondas, Old World sand boas, Mauritius snakes, Colubrids, typical snakes, Asian pipe snakes, cobras, coral snakes, mambas, sea snakes, Mexican pythons, pythons, dwarf boas, pipe snakes, shield-tailed snakes, vipers, pitvipers, Fae's viper, night adders, pitvipers, rattlesnakes, true vipers, sunbeam snakes, blind snakes, primitive blind snakes, slender blind snakes, thread snakes, blind snakes, typical blind snakes, Crocodiles, alligators, garials. Aves: Ostrich, rheas, cassowaries and emu, kiwis, elephant birds, upland moas, great moas, lesser moas, Tinamous, Australian brush turkey,megapodes, chachalacas, curassows, and guans, Guineafowl, pheasants and allies, New World quail, pheasants and relatives, mihirungs, screamers, magpie-goose, ducks, geese, and swans, grebes, swimming flamingos, flamingos, pigeons and doves, sandgrouse, mesites, Tawny frogmouth, Nightjars, oilbird, potoos, frogmouths, owlet-nightjars, treeswifts, swifts, hummingbird, cuckoos and relatives, turacos and relatives, bustards, hoatzin, cranes and allies, cranes, limpkin, trumpeters, rails and allies, adzebills, finfoots, flufftails, rails and relatives, thick-knees and allies, thick-knees and relatives, sheathbills, Magellanic plover, plover-like waders, golden plovers, ibisbill, oystercatchers, plovers and lapwings, jacana-like waders, painted snipes, Egyptian plover, jacanas, seedsnipes, plains-wanderer, sandpipers and relatives, buttonquail, gulls and allies, coursers and pratincoles, crab-plover, skuas and jaegers, auks and puffins, gulls, skimmers and terns, sunbittern, tropicbirds, penguins, albatrosses, austral storm petrels, northern storm petrels, petrels and relatives, White stork, storks, frigatebirds, boobies and gannets, darters, cormorants and shags, ibises and spoonbills, hamerkop, shoebill, pelicans, herons and relatives, New World vultures, secretarybird, osprey, hawks, eagles, buzzards, harriers, kites and Old World vultures, barn owls, true owls, mousebirds, cuckooroller, trogons and quetzals, hornbills, hoopoe, woodhoopoes, bee-eater, rollers, ground rollers, todies, motmots, Kingfisher, jacamars, puffbirds, African barbets, Asian barbets, toucans, toucan barbets, American barbets, woodpeckers, honeyguides, seriemas, falcons and relatives, kakapo, kea and kakas, cockatoos, African and American parrots, Australasian parrots, Pesquet's parrot, vasa parrots, Pitta cyanea, Lyrebird, New Zealand wrens, suboscines, Old World suboscines, sapayoa, Calyptomenid broadbills, pittas, broadbills, asities, New World suboscines, bronchophones, manakins, cotingas, sharpbills, royal flycatchers and allies, becards and tityras, spadebills, many-colored rush tyrants, mionectine flycatchers, tyrant flycatchers, tracheophones, crescent-chests, gnateaters, antbirds, antpittas, ground antbirds, ovenbirds, oscines, scrub-birds, lyrebirds, bowerbirds, Australasian treecreepers, Australasian wrens, bristlebirds, gerygones and allies, honeyeaters and relatives, Australasian babblers, logrunners, quail-thrushes and jewel-babblers, cuckoo-shrikes, whitehead and allies, sittellas, wattled ploughbills, whipbirds and quail-thrushes, Australo-Papuan bellbirds, crested shriketits, painted berrypeckers, vireos and relatives, whistlers and relatives, Old World orioles, Boatbills, woodswallows and butcherbirds, mottled berryhunter, ioras, bristlehead, bushshrikes and relatives, wattle-eyes and batises, vangas , fantails, silktail, drongo fantail, drongos, blue-capped ifrits, Australian mudnesters, birds-of-paradise, monarch flycatchers, shrikes, jays and crows, berrypeckers, satinbirds, Australasian robins, stitchbird, wattlebirds, rockfowl, rock-jumpers, rail-babbler, fairy warblers, hyliotas, penduline tits, chickadees and true tits, Nicators, bearded reedling, larks, African warblers, cisticolas and relatives, marsh warblers, pygmy wren-babblers, grass warblers, Malagasy warblers, swallows and martins, bulbuls, leaf warblers, bush warblers , Bushtits, true warblers, parrotbills, fulvettas, white-eyes, babblers and relatives, fulvettas, ground babblers, laughing thrushes, kinglets, spotted wren-babblers, Hawaiian honeyeaters, silky-flycatchers, waxwings, Palmchat, hypocolius, wallcreeper, nuthatches, treecreepers, wrens, gnatcatchers, dippers, thrushes and relatives, flycatchers and relatives, oxpeckers, mockingbirds and thrashers, starlings and mynas , sugarbirds, dapplethroat and allies, flowerpeckers, sunbirds, fairy-bluebirds, leafbirds, olive warbler, accentors, pink-tailed bunting, weavers and relatives, whydahs and indigobirds, weaver finches, Old World sparrows, wagtails and pipits, finches and relatives, longspurs, snow buntings, rosy thrush-tanagers, Old World buntings and New World sparrows, American sparrows, palm-tanager and allies, New World blackbirds and New World orioles, Cuban warblers, wood warblers, cardinals, grosbeaks, and New World buntings, tanagers and relatives. MAMMALS: Rat, Bat, Horse, Standardbred, Throughbred, Saddlebred, Arab, Palomino, Australian stock, Appaloosa, Barb, Lippizaner, Mustang, American Shetland, Falabella, Percheron, Shire, Mule, Bullock, Setter, Oxen, Camel, Tiger, Lion, Hyaenas, Leopard, Bear, Cat, Dog, Sheep, Goat, Cow, Cob, Pig, Chamois, Bulldog, Borzoi, Loris, Longspur, Harvest mouse, Spiny – ant eater, Duck – billed platypus, Elephant, Rhinoceros, Tonkinese, Ragdoll, Margay, Tapir, Seal, Sea lion, Walrus, Dolphin, Bactrian camel, Arabian camel, Bushbaby, Burmese cat, Whale, Porpoise, Aardvark, Ape, Monkey, Gorilla, Chimpanzee, Flying Lemur, Hare, Pika, Macaque, Rabbit, Colobus, Antelope, Caribou, Cattle, Deer, Grizzly bear, Hyrax, Armadillo, Porcupine, Hedgehog, Arctic hare, Mole, Shrew, Beaver, Asian black bear, Polar bear, Sloth bear, Spectacled bear, Mouse, Squirrel, Dugong, Moose, Fallow deer, Reindeer, Red deer, Manatee, Egyptian Mau, Scottish fold, Himalayan, Birman, Red squirrel, Hippopotamus, Weasel, Whale, Wither, Blue whale, Sperm whale, Killer whale, Wallaby, Beluga, Baird’s beaked whale, Grey whale, Bryde’s whale, Pygmy right whale, Southern right whale, Seal, Ape, Indri, Aye – aye, Alaskan Malamute, Dobermann, Beagle, Kinkajou, Afgan Hound, Rough Collie, Cardigan Welsh Corgi, Sheepdog, Pointer, Poddle, Weimaraner, Bloodhound, Zebra, Giraffe, Yak, Arctic fox, Polecat, Golden Retriever, Kerry Blue, Prairie dog, Airedale, German spitz, Pekingese, Otter, Shih Tzu, Proboscis monkey, Orang – utan, Red Howler monkey, Spider monkey, Sloth, Koala, Pangolin, Mustelid, Mongoose, Guinea pig, Malayan Porcupine, Naked Mole rat, Capybara, Pallid Gerbil, Brown rat, Somali, Ocicat, Balinese, Bengal, Cymric, Chartreux, Devon Rex, Turkish Angora, Russian Blue, Yellow – necked woodmouse, Hamster, Grey squirrel, Chipmunk, Fox, Blue Longhair, Chinese Pangolin, Blue – cream shorthair, Tortoiseshell and white shorthair, Brown spotted shorthair, Red and white Japanese bobtail, Javanese, Red Persian Longhair, Brown classic tabby maine coon, Lilac angora, Seal point Siamese, Brown and white sphinx, Red classic tabby manx, Vampire bat, Proboscis bat, Franquet’s fruit bat, Bengal Tiger, Horseshoe bat, Noctule bat, Funnel - eared bat, Blue exotic, Foreign lilac oriental shorthair, Boxer, Bay, Cream point colour pointed british shorthair, Abyssinian, Cinnamon silver Cornish rex, Wolverine, Skunk, Human being, Pine marten, Stoat, Chocolate point longhair, Husky, Ant eater, Kangaroo, Gray Mouse Lemur, Musk oxen, Raccoon dogrie, Pasnda, Bouto, Pembroke Welsh corgi, Whippet, Whisker, Indus river dolphin, Franciscana, Sorrel, Finless porpoise, Jerboa, Harbour porpoise, Bottlenose dolphin, Border Collie, Diana Monkey, White – beaked dolphin, Atlantic white – sided dolphin, Bobcat, Alpaca, Aberdeen angus, Lynx, Pacific white – sided dolphin, Rhesus monkey, Irish wolfhound, Baboon, Slivery marmoset, Puma, Ocelot, Norwegian Forest Cat, Basenji, Keeshond, Akita, Samoyed, Briard, Brittaney, Vizsla, Weimaraner, Saluki, Greyhound, Rottweiler, Bullmastiff, Newfoundland, Puli, Bombay, Sphynx, Kangaroo rat, Humpback whale, Red panda, Maltese, Pug, Chihuahua, Papillon, Pomeranian, Schipperke, Aardwolve, Cheetah, Civet, Red – Bellied Lemur, Moustache, Monkey, Yorkshire terrier, German shepherd, Clumber spaniel, Bouvier des Flandres, Belgian sheepdog, Boston terrier, Italian greyhound, Chesapeake Bay retriever, Genet, Musk deer, Bichon fries, Rock Hyrax, Pony, Mink, Mammoth, Mastodon, Giant sloth, Llama, African Elephant, DeBrazza’s Monkey, Siberian Tiger, Hackney Pony, Bonnet Monkey, German wirehaired pointer, Ferret, Jaguar, Dalmatian, Red Bengal Tiger, Badger, Shunk, Skye terrier, Great dane, Grampus, Bandicoot, Wolf, Marmot, Squirrel monkey, Sable, Minke whale, Spectacle porpoise, Opossums, Airedale, Wombat. etc , Ramapithecus, Australopithecus bosei or Paranthropus bosei, Zinjanthopus bosei, Homo – erectus ( Java man, Peking man, Heidelberg man ), Homo – Sapiens ( Neanderthal man, Cro – Magnon man) to the modern humans with their development and structure of their Heart, their contributions to the formation of the modern humans. What is the origin of the heart? In which place the heart is situated? What is the weight of our (modern humans) heart? Can a person live without a heart? What is the function of the heart? How heart pumps blood to the body? What type of circulation takes place in the human heart? How big our human heart is? Why is our (modern humans) heart considered as the most developed in the world? Why does heart stop? What are heart sounds? What are the types of heart sounds? What causes the heart sounds heard with a stethoscope? What is the anatomy of the heart? Why heart is considered an important organ in the body? Why can’t people live if heartbeat stops? Where is heart located in? How many chambers are present in the heart? What is the number of heart beats per minute? What is the amount of blood pumped by heart? How much blood does the human heart pump in a lifetime? And Short notes on heart attack i.e. what is the definition of a heart attack? Why does a heart attack occur? What are the types of the heart attack? What happens if human get a heart attack? What are the symptoms of Heart attack? What are the causes of the Heart attack? What are the risk factors related to the Heart attack? What are the types of risk factors cause the Heart attack? What are the complications of a Heart attack? What types of diagnosis useful in detecting and treating a heart attack? What treatment is needed to treat heart attack patients? What are 5 strategies to be maintained after the heart attack? What to do after recovery from a heart attack? What is cardiac rehabilitation? Why cardiac rehabilitation is needed to heart attack patients? Does cardiac rehabilitation create positive effects? What are a lifestyle and home remedies are to be maintained? What type of coping and support should be given to heart attack patients? What are the immediate measures should be taken when you encounter an emergency of heart attack patient? What signs and symptoms list should be made to consult a doctor? What is a widow maker heart attack? What is the definition of a widowmaker heart attack? What are the symptoms of Widowmaker heart attack? What are the causes of Widowmaker heart attack? What are the risk factors related to Widowmaker heart attack? What are the complications of a widowmaker heart attack? What types of diagnosis useful in detecting and treating a widowmaker heart attack? What treatment is needed to treat heart attack patients? How to make over your lifestyle? What type of measures should be taken to stay away from a heart attack? What are 20 types of foods should be taken to keep your heart healthy? Solutions and answers of above questions, material and topics are included and cleared in this book.'
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stingray-stories · 3 years
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Day 14 7/11/2021
Sundayyyyyy :))). No work! This morning I rallied and did a nice workout and got drenched in sweat (we ain’t in arid ass Colorado anymore toto). Then we went out to snorkel. The first spot was at the rubblepile which is essentially a pile of dead coral that changes in size and statute with the tides and current. Surrounding the rubble pile there is tons of life including massive coral colonies and lots of fish. (Side note - I was using the voice to text feature and this is what it typed out in place of what I have written above: “The first was at the rubblepile which is essentially a bunch of dead squirrels that chefs in size and stature with the tides and curtains surrounded by curl heads and fish” bahahah what the hecko!!? good try!). Anyways…At one point there were six sharks that appeared to be surrounding us but they ended up dispersing. I saw three blacktip reef sharks, a gray reef shark, and my new favorite was the whitetip reef shark. The second snorkel was at Hui feng where I saw sooooo many different corals (again trying to make time to draw a better map so you can see what I’m talking about). There were also huge forests of acropora (similar to the look of stag horn coral), antler coral, giant plate coral, and a ton of others I don’t know the names of. I was totally geeking out. I also for the first time saw a unicorn fish which if you’ve never seen one before I highly recommend looking them up they are both strange and beautiful and ugly and amazing all at the same time. Here are some of the other types of fish that I saw that you should also look up: peacock grouper, bluefin trevally, yellowfin surgeonfish, striped surgeonfish, bluefin unicorn fish, raccoon butterflyfish, humbug dascyllus, and more! Once we returned, I had a nice lunch with fresh coconut water straight from the coconut. Later in the afternoon I rode my bike North on the runway, parked it, and walked along the beach to find a nice spot to relax. After finding a spot with both shade and sun, I set up my towel and my music. I really enjoyed watching the waves crashing in the distance as well as looking at all birds flying above me including frigatebirds chasing poor boobies and trying to take their food from them. I also watched a bunch of curious hermit crabs coming close to my towel and checking it out. I then drew some of the natural landscape and after a couple hours I hopped in the water and then headed back to camp. After getting back I caught up on some blog posts and continued to draw while watching The Office. Then I washed my hair which was a big deal because it has been very long since I had last cleaned it. I am trying to train my hair while I’m here so that I don’t have to wash it as often. It’s been pretty easy since I wear hats or bandannas every day so I’m hoping to come back a new haired ladayyyy. After that, me and my new doooo walked over to meet everyone at the galley where we had a little poke party with the whole group. The day previously our rad boating dudes went out on the open ocean and caught two ahi tunas which together weighed 40 pounds!!! So, Mollie, one of our amazing chefs, made an absurd amount of poke of all different kinds for everyone. I did not partake but it all looked amazing for those fish lovers out there. After that I turned in pretty early, read Harry Potter, and went to bed.
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First photo: gnarly surf through my binocs. Second: a little crabby friend that wasn’t very scared of me. Third: A couple Great Frigate birds (Fregata minor). Fourth: a bit of my beach setup (I’ll try to get a better photo next time!).
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galapagostropics · 3 years
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A battle for the Galapagos: a run to expand the refuge as fishing armadas lurk
Ecuador's president to opt for a proposition to broaden islands' marine sanctuary, seen as important to secure world legacy habitat from fishing multinationals
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Roaming along a shoreline dotted with sea lion pups nursed by their mothers barking at one another, utterly untroubled with your presence, is a uniquely magical encounter. On the route that leads to the shore on teeny Seymour Islet, noisily courting blue-footed boobies as well as frigate birds are similarly unruffled by the existence of human beings. When Charles Darwin came by on HMS Beagle in 1835, approaching the natural world without disrupting it looks to be as heartwarmingly effortless on the Galápagos Islands today as. Separated from the landmass, the island chain's unique local creatures-- from large turtles to finches-- helped Darwin lay out his theory of evolution in On the Origin of Species. Chinese fishing armada ransacked waters around Galápagos, investigation demonstrates Read more One of the factors the isles are such a center of life is that the shallower, nutrient-rich ocean around the volcanic atolls are fed by a assemblage of warm and cold currents. This provides a refuge for an array of migratory ocean-going animals, from scalloped hammerhead sharks to Manta Rays . It's also why commercial foreign fishing fleets lurk at the side of the Ecuadorian archipelago's territorial waters. Almost 250 boats-- 243 of them Chinese flagged, consisting of vast fishing boats and also refrigerated compartment ships-- have actually logged an astounding 73,000 hours of fishing a month and brought up countless tonnes of calamari and also marine life. Ecuadorian tuna boats are present, as well: they circle the Archipelago's oceanic reserve-- an region of 133,000 sq kilometres (51,000 sq miles)-- as well as float numerous fish aggregation tools, or Gimmicks. Guardians have actually been activating the siren, stating that unmatched pressure from overfishing, and extreme bycatch of sharks as well as other species, now threaten aquatic life in the world-renowned archipelago. Their apprehensions have actually led to a brand-new proposal: an expansion of the Galápagos ocean reserve spot, protecting an additional swathe of safeguarded ocean from the north, east and southern around it like a wrapping. Talking with the Guardian, Ecuador's president, Lenín Moreno, claimed the proposal was based upon his "government's strong devotion to guarding, the protection of the planet and, specifically, the Galapagos Islands". It was the very same commitment he had actually laid out at the COP25 UN climate change meeting in 2019, he claimed. Several conservation groups are excited by the idea. "It is the prime wise proposition which benefits fishers, biodiversity as well as decreases the effect of climate change," stated Matt Rand, director of the Bench Bertarelli Ocean Heritage taskforce. Yet not every person agrees. The plan-- which Moreno has especially not yet accepted-- would expand the marine reserve to 445,953 sq km, even more than three times the size of the existing secured spot. It would also lock out Ecuador's larger tuna fishing vessels from three-quarters of the archipelago's exclusive financial sector, extending for 200 maritime miles around the standing reserve. An exception would certainly be made in the zone's south-western zone, which would be alloted for " liable fishing". Luigi Benincasa, executive director of Atunec, Ecuador's tuna fishing organization, claimed the strategy amounted to penalizing neighborhood anglers. "We need to comprehend that a 3rd of our catch, which we obtain in an exclusively Ecuadorian angling area, we won't have tomorrow," he claimed. Fishing on the western side of the island chain, which is around 620 miles (1,000 kilometres) from mainland Ecuador, would certainly have an influence on profits during a period of economic challenge, stated Benincasa. In the Sea port of Manta, the tuna industry provides benefit up to 200,000 individuals, he said. The tuna industry makes up the substantial majority of the nation's $1.6 bn (₤ 1.2 bn) fishing market. " We would certainly have to look for fishing areas much additionally away with substantially increased fuel usage, along with having to compete with the international armadas," Benincasa provided. Ecuador has the major and most productive tuna armada in the eastern Pacific region, and the second-largest on the planet, with more than 100 purse-seine net tuna fishing ships and nearly as many long-liners. The Galápagos nautical reserve was the 2nd biggest in the world when it was created in 1998. Currently it is number 33, outdoed in overall size and aspiration by other South American nations such as Chile, which created the 740,000 sq kilometres Rapa Nui sea reserve around Easter Archipelago as well as has actually assured to protect greater than 40% of its complete aquatic area. Ecuador's tuna fishing fleet as well as the dimension of its catch have since more than doubled in dimension, claims Eliecer Cruz, leader of Más Galápagos, a local initiative to increase the reserve. Research study proves fishing performance has raised by 104% in the archipelagos' exclusive financial area this century. Whale sharks, excellent hammerhead sharks along with Galapagos Penguins and also waved albatross , have all come to be noted as extremely endangered in the IUCN red checklist considering that 1998 as industrial-scale fishing has enhanced. They are amongst 14 aquatic migratory animals located in the island chain's ocean-- incorporating Galápagos fur seals as well as sea lions -- whose preservation standing has gotten worse in the previous 20 years. (The variety of the waved albatross includes southern Chile but it just nests on the island of Española.). However despite the fact that merely artisan fishing is enabled in the nautical reserve, larger vessels navigate the restriction by tempting the fish outside the shielded sector making use of FADs. Known domestically as plantados, they are utilized to victim tuna, however sweep up various other thalassic marine life such as marlin, sailfish and shark , and bring in sea lions, dolphins as well as turtles before wandering out of the sea refuge. ," stated Cruz. "The heavier fishing watercrafts of in between 1,200 to 2,000 tonnes can cast 500 of them.". Walter Borbor, an artisanal fisherman from Santa Cruz island who line-fishes for tuna, has come throughout a number of the drifting fish traps, which are basically timber boatings with GPS trackers connected as well as meshes hanging down for up to 100 metres. " The big boats toss them outside the refuge understanding there's an infinity of currents that will certainly lug them through and out again with a large shoal of smaller fish, which attract the larger fish," Borbor exclaimed over the clatter of the outboard engine on his eight-metre fibreglass boat. " We've collected at least 30 plantados. We recycle the nettings to make hammocks and also hen cages," he stated. Bring up a thrashing yellowfin tuna, the diminutive fisherman said he must make progressively longer fishing trips for a smaller sized catch. " Surrounding the isles there are several commercial boats that prevent the thalassic fish from arriving-- they come below to spawn and also to eat," Borbor claimed. " The spillover result reveals just exactly how productive the sea sanctuary has actually been," stated Norman Wray, commander in chief of the Galápagos governing authorities. " And now we need to broaden it.". Sturdy fish numbers have brought in also much pressure, Wray claimed, not exactly from the local fleet but from foreign ships, which catch intensively on the brim of the exclusion zone. Moreno needs to decide whether to commit to the refuge's development by executing a ruling before he leaves office on 24 May. " An eventual increase in preservation measures in the Galápagos maritime reserve would certainly overlap with crucial locations of endeavor for the fishing sector, including small-scale fishing, with a potential adverse influence for the nationwide economic climate," the head of state said when inquired if he prepared to increase the protected area. "For that factor, any kind of analysis needs to be extensive, incorporating all the socioeconomic and also ecological facets.". If Moreno does not authorize the plan into regulation, it can encounter a much longer as well as a lot more convoluted path, as a legislative board on biodiversity and also essential resources might need to determine whether it must be questioned as well as elected on in the national assembly. Juan Cárdenas, an assembly member on the committee, said he supported the growth plan due to the islands' world heritage standing. "I understand the placement of the fishers but they are not the interests of our nation," he said. However, the strong fishing industry is expected to exert its pressure on Moreno and also on anyone who comes to be the nation's future leader. Benincasa, the tuna sector representative, said that as a third world country Ecuador can not manage to distribute even more of its ocean to conservation. "We shouldn't be so naive," he claimed. Ecuador has registered to the Worldwide Sea Partnership in assistance of the UK-led 30 by 30 initiative, an global commitment to protect at the very least 30% of the global ocean in shielded marine locations by 2030. Much regarding 13% of Ecuador's waters are safeguarded. Preservationists expect further global aid for the program to broaden the Galápagos nautical reserve could persuade Moreno's judgment. " It would be an amazing heritage to keep," said Cruz. Luigi Benincasa, executive director of Atunec, Ecuador's tuna fishing union, claimed the plan amounted to oppressing regional fishing fleet. "We need to realise that a 3rd of our catch, which we attain in an exclusively Ecuadorian fishing region, we will not have down the road," he stated. Fishing on the westernmost edge of the archipelago, that is around 620 miles (1,000 kilometres) from mainland Ecuador, would certainly have an impact on profits at a period of financial distress, stated Benincasa. The tuna field encompasses the vast bulk of the nation's $1.6 bn (₤ 1.2 bn) fishing industry. Pulling up a thrashing yellowfin tuna, the diminutive fisher claimed he must make increasingly longer fishing runs for a smaller catch.
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joyousnudibranch · 3 years
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What do you think this traditional Japanese building is? It's a traditional vinegar brewery in Aki City. この伝統的な建物、何だと思いますか? これは、安芸市にあるお酢の醸造所です。 春田酢造場さん。
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This is their grain vinegar. When I was a child, mom used a popular brand for most vinegared dishes. But for making one special dish, it had to be this vinegar, nothing else. The dish was seared frigate tuna. Maybe you’ve heard of seared bonito (katsuo no tataki), a local specialty of our prefecture (Kochi)? Here in Muroto, frigate tuna in often used in place of bonito. And since frigate tuna is much fattier, we don’t serve vinegar sauce separately like we do for seared bonito; we pat the vinegar sauce directly onto the slices of seared frigate tuna! To be used that way, the vinegar should be mild because if it is too sour, it would kill the delicate taste of the fish fat. So, this mild Maruhi Vinegar was the vinegar of choice for that purpose. ここで作られてる穀物酢のマルヒ酢。 私が子供の頃、母は普段の料理には全国的にポピュラーなミ〇〇ン酢を使ってましたが、ある料理にだけは、ゼッタイこのマルヒ酢を使ってました。 その料理は、スマのタタキ。
カツオのタタキだとタレは別添えで出すけど、もっとずっと脂っこいスマの場合は、炙ってスライスした身に直接タレを叩きこみますから、ウチの辺りでは。文字通りタタキ。 なので、そのタレに使う酢は、酸っぱ過ぎるとせっかくのスマの脂の味を損ねてしまうから、マイルドめのマルヒ酢を使う、というのが我が家の台所の掟だったわけです。
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Years passed. Now my dad would not eat seared frigate tuna, saying that it’s too fatty that his stomach can not take it. The dish has been officially banned in our kitchen. And the small store in my neighborhood where I used to buy Maruhi Vinegar closed several years ago. I thought that I would never be able to make/taste the dish in the way I did in my childhood. 年月が経ち。 もう父は、スマのタタキは食べません。脂がキツ過ぎてお腹が受け付けないと。ってことでウチの家ではスマのタタキはオフィシャルに禁止。加えて、マルヒ酢を置いてくれてた近所の雑貨屋さんが閉店して、買えなくなった。 もうこれで、子供の頃のスマのタタキの味を、ここで味わうことはもうないな、と思ってました...。 But then one day, I accidentally found that the vinegar brewery that makes Maruhi Vinegar was actually not too far from the hospital I take my parents to! I thought it was the sign. The heaven is telling me to make that dish again. So yesterday, I went to the brewery on my way back from the hospital. ところがある日、たまたまネットで、マルヒ酢を作ってる醸造所は、親を連れて行ってる安芸病院から遠くないことを発見! で、昨日、病院の帰りにそこを探して寄ってきました。
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At the brewery, I was told that the grain vinegar was still available at one supermarket -- only one supermarket -- in Muroto. But this rice vinegar was not available anywhere in Muroto City, so I bought one bottle there at the brewery. This is a very sweet rice vinegar and quite versatile. I like it. :)
醸造所で聞いてみたら、穀物酢のほうは、室戸市内でも1か所、今でも売ってるところがあるとのこと。 でも、この米酢は室戸では売ってないようで。これは珍しく、かーなり甘い米酢。いろいろ使い勝手がある便利なお酢です(私にと��ては)。 ^^) Mmmmm... a post about seared frigate tuna coming up soon? Maybe? ;) さて、そのうちに、スマのタタキの投稿が... 来る予感??
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belldad23-blog · 5 years
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Fun Food Recipes
Having a healthy colon is the important thing to long term health and finding good colon healthy recipes is a technique to help maintain your body healthy. On smaller ships, like destroyers and frigates, you often would have four meals a day. Next time that you're in search of fun food recipes, think about these candy recipes and take a look at them. Lower into 3cm x 3cm squares once cold and roll in castor sugar or a mix of castor sugar and coconut. resep Along with good colon well being, utilizing recipes made with these meals will have a pronounced effect in your general health generally. Butter may be a type of ingredients made cheaper by a hydrogenated oil and salt added course of. Also, to lower the full calorie consumption and stop weight gain, reduce on added sugars. Regardless of the time of the year, you may make sure that English food recipes of yesterday and at present will get you through the day. Making finger meals is way from time-consuming and costly. Whether you're cooking for the holiday or just cooking weekly dinner, food usually instances creates memorable times you will always remember. Fiber, specifically, is sweet to your colon well being as it adds bulk which helps to move the meals alongside the digestive tract. So, colon wholesome recipes will include little or no animal meals and be primarily based primarily on whole grains, fruits and vegetables. When the hotter months fade to the cool crisp fall, you'll be able to expect that the English food recipes can even comply with suit. The true UK Fish and Chips uses white fish, corresponding to cod or haddock when getting ready this meal. Colon wholesome recipes for dinner follow the identical widespread sense rules. This way you can have a wholesome drink or meal on the desk in simply couple of minutes. Add the sugar, golden syrup and water and simmer the combination until the sugar has dissolved. The tomato sauce goes on the mini pizza first and then you definitely add all different substances - ham, mushrooms, bacon, cheese, tuna, chicken or anything you fancy.
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alexsparkworld · 2 years
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Maldives Honeymoon with unique food experiences
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Because the Maldives are nearly entirely at water, seafood is the primary source of protein. The island nation's cuisine is a synthesis of Arabic, Indian, Sri Lankan, and East Asian influences. However, the tourist resorts sprinkled around the islands provide an array of ethnic cuisines, making it feasible to dine your way around the globe while living in luxury at one of these resorts. While seafood takes center stage regardless of how it is served, those who prefer their cuisine to originate on dry ground will find plenty of alternatives.
Coconut is another important ingredient in a variety of Maldivian recipes and may be served shredded, as milk, or as coconut oil for deep frying. Skipjack tuna, small Tunney, yellowfin tuna, frigate tuna, bigeye crabs, wahoo, and mahi-mahi are some of the favorite species. Additionally, the Maldives provides some unique culinary experiences. Numerous resorts offer underwater dining. Additionally, flattening breakfast is a well-known practice. Additionally, some resorts recruit renowned chefs or provide culinary schools to enhance the experience.
You can plan your Honeymoon to Maldives to experience this unique and refreshing food experience too. Olanka Travels is here to give you best Maldives Honeymoon tour Packages as you choose.
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