Pelagic fish (original) (raw)
- Pelagic fish live in the pelagic zone of ocean or lake waters—being neither close to the bottom nor near the shore—in contrast with demersal fish that do live on or near the bottom, and reef fish that are associated with coral reefs. The marine pelagic environment is the largest aquatic habitat on Earth, occupying 1,370 million cubic kilometres (330 million cubic miles), and is the habitat for 11% of known fish species. The oceans have a mean depth of 4,000 metres (2.5 miles). About 98% of the total water volume is below 100 metres (330 ft), and 75% is below 1,000 metres (3,300 ft). Marine pelagic fish can be divided into coastal (inshore) fish and oceanic (offshore) fish. Coastal pelagic fish inhabit the relatively shallow and sunlit waters above the continental shelf, while inhabit the vast and deep waters beyond the continental shelf (even though they also may swim inshore). Pelagic fish range in size from small coastal forage fish, such as herrings and sardines, to large apex predator oceanic fishes, such as bluefin tuna and oceanic sharks. They are usually agile swimmers with streamlined bodies, capable of sustained cruising on long-distance migrations. Many pelagic fish swim in schools weighing hundreds of tonnes. Others, such as the large ocean sunfish, are solitary . There are also freshwater pelagic fish in some of the larger lakes, such as the Lake Tanganyika sardine. (en)
- Le pélagos est l'ensemble des organismes aquatiques (marins ou dulcicoles) qui occupent, dans une « colonne d'eau », la profondeur la plus proche de la surface, par opposition au benthos qui vit à proximité du fond. L'étymologie de ce mot vient du grec πέλαγος / pélagos (« la haute mer »). L'adjectif pélagique dérive de pélagos pour préciser qu'une espèce vit en pleine mer. Un chalut pélagique est utilisé dans la colonne d'eau, il n'est pas traîné sur le fond. Le pélagos est constitué du necton qui peut se déplacer contre le courant et du plancton qui ne peut lutter contre celui-ci mais peut se déplacer verticalement dans la colonne d'eau. (fr)
- Pelagische vissen zijn vissen die in de open zee leven, veelal op enige afstand van de kust en van de zeebodem. Sommige pelagische vissen zijn gedeeltelijke bewoners van kustwateren, en leven dus niet hun hele leven lang in de open zee. De mariene pelagische zone is veruit de grootste natuurlijke leefomgeving op aarde. Het beslaat ongeveer 1370 miljoen kubieke kilometer en is de woonplaats van ongeveer 11% van alle bekende vissoorten. Ruim driekwart van de marine pelagische zone bevindt zich dieper dan duizend meter onder water. De biodiversiteit van vissen in de pelagische zone verschilt sterk per regio, en is onder meer afhankelijk van de beschikbaarheid van licht, voedingsstoffen, zuurstofniveaus, temperatuur, saliniteit en druk. Pelagische vissen variëren van kleine prooivisjes bij de kust, zoals haring en sardines, tot grote oceanische roofvissen, zoals tonijnen, zeilvissen en barracuda's. De meeste pelagische vissen zijn behendige zwemmers met gestroomlijnde lichamen, die lange afstanden kunnen afleggen. De meeste zwemmen in scholen. Sommige hebben een solitaire levenswijze, zoals de maanvis die gewoonlijk passief meedrijft met de zeestromingen. (nl)
- ( 이 문서는 수면 가까이에 사는 물고기에 관한 것입니다. 잉엇과의 민물고기에 대해서는 붕어 문서를 참고하십시오.) 부어(浮魚, 영어: pelagic fish)는 바닷물의 수면 가까이에 사는 물고기이다. 정어리, 고등어, 가다랑어 등이 있다. (ko)
- Пелагические рыбы — рыбы, обитающие в пелагической зоне океанов или озёр, в отличие от донных, которые живут на дне или у дна, и рифовых, связанных с прибрежной зоной. Морские пелагические воды — крупнейшая акватория на Земле, объём которой по разным оценкам составляет 1370 миллионов кубических километров. Она служит средой обитания для более 11 % известных ныне видов рыб. Средняя глубина океанов составляет 4000 м. Свыше 98 % объёма воды находится глубже 100 м, а более 75 % глубже 1000 м. Морских пелагических рыб можно разделить на океанических и прибрежных. Прибрежные рыбы населяют мелководье над континентальным шельфом, куда проникает солнечный свет. Океанические обитают в более глубоких и обширных водах за континентальным шельфом, хотя иногда заплывают в прибрежную зону. Размер пелагических рыб колеблется от мелких кормовых рыб, таких как сельди и сардины, до крупных хищников, занимающих вершину пищевой пирамиды, например, тунцов и океанических акул. Как правило пелагические рыбы — отличные пловцы, они стремительно скользят в плотных слоях воды. У многих тело имеет веретенообразную или торпедообразную форму, позволяющую им развивать в воде высокую скорость и преодолевать большие расстояния. Парусник способен развить скорость до 109 км/ч, а некоторые виды тунцов пересекают Тихий океан. Многие пелагические рыбы образуют гигантские косяки массой свыше тысячи тонн. Другие, подобно рыбе-луне, чья масса достигает 2 тонн, ведут одиночный образ жизни. У пелагических рыб плотное тело, они имеют отрицательную плавучесть. Почти у всех видов за редким исключением имеется плавательный пузырь, заполненный газовой смесью низкой плотности. Благодаря пузырю тело пелагических рыб обретает нейтральную или положительную плавучесть. В Мировом океане рыбы с плавательным пузырём встречаются на глубине до 7000 м. У пелагических рыб плавательный пузырь выполняет также гидростатическую функцию. (ru)
- https://www.pelagic-ac.org/
- http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/abstract/323/5922/1734
- https://books.google.com/books%3Fhl=en&lr=&id=_4xZ_QoYNSwC&oi=fnd&pg=PA21
- https://books.google.com/books%3Fid=ZaSuYgEACAAJ
- https://books.google.com/books%3Fid=sLoqT_xWaqoC%7Cdate=2008%7Cpublisher=Garland
- https://phys.org/news/2006-02-fish-mit-sensor.html
- https://phys.org/news/2009-03-scientists-ids-genesis-animal-behavior.html
- https://web.archive.org/web/20090521003502/http:/www.bio.uib.no/inc/pdffiles/Pub/1325.pdf
- https://web.archive.org/web/20140625125029/http:/marinebio.org/oceans/open-ocean.asp
- https://www.ted.com/talks/edith_widder_glowing_life_in_an_underwater_world
- dbr:Camouflage
- dbr:Carrion
- dbr:Ambush_predator
- dbr:Protist
- dbr:Sardine
- dbr:Scalloped_hammerhead
- dbr:Sloane's_viperfish
- dbr:Euthynnus_alletteratus
- dbc:Fishing_industry
- dbr:Barracuda
- dbr:Basking_shark
- dbr:Batoidea
- dbr:Benthos
- dbr:Beryciformes
- dbr:Billfish
- dbr:Biomass
- dbr:Bony_fish
- dbr:Brachiopod
- dbr:Deep_sea_fish
- dbr:Devil_fish
- dbr:Algal_bloom
- dbr:Antarctic_toothfish
- dbr:Apex_predator
- dbr:Pelagic_zone
- dbr:Remora
- dbr:Requiem_shark
- dbr:Vertebrate
- dbr:Viperfish
- dbr:Deep_scattering_layer
- dbr:Deep_sea
- dbr:Detritus
- dbr:Incidental_catch
- dbr:Inner_ear
- dbr:Southern_bluefin_tuna
- dbr:Trawling
- dbr:Mackerel_shark
- dbr:Pelagic
- dbr:Pelagic_sediments
- dbr:Continental_shelf
- dbr:Continental_shelves
- dbr:Copepod
- dbr:Coral_reef
- dbr:Sailfish
- dbr:Salmon
- dbr:Salmonidae
- dbr:North_Pacific_Current
- dbr:Yellowfin_tuna
- dbr:Photic_zone
- dbr:Threatened_species
- dbr:Orange_roughy
- dbr:Seamount
- dbr:Telescopefish
- dbr:Coastal_fish
- dbr:Eel
- dbr:Enzyme
- dbr:Mobula
- dbr:Morphology_(biology)
- dbr:Continental_margin
- dbr:Anglerfish
- dbr:Bathypterois_grallator
- dbr:Benthic_zone
- dbr:Bobtail_snipe_eel
- dbr:Shoaling_and_schooling
- dbr:Skeleton
- dbr:Stingray
- dbr:Commercial_fishing
- dbr:Demersal_fish
- dbr:Zooplankton
- dbr:Freshwater_fish
- dbr:Hammerjaw
- dbr:Daggertooth
- dbr:Oxygenation_(environmental)
- dbr:Oyashio_Current
- dbr:Photophore
- dbr:Pilot_fish
- dbr:Pomfret
- dbr:Ocean_sunfish
- dbr:Stoplight_loosejaw
- dbr:Tagging_of_Pacific_Predators
- dbr:Patagonian_toothfish
- dbr:Adaptation
- dbr:Cetacean
- dbr:Tonne
- dbr:Tuna
- dbr:Whale_shark
- dbr:Wild_fisheries
- dbr:Dolphin
- dbr:Game_fish
- dbr:Lateral_line
- dbr:Acanthopterygii
- dbr:Albacore
- dbr:Algae
- dbr:Anchovy
- dbr:Cuttlefish
- dbr:Ecology
- dbr:European_Commission
- dbr:Exclusive_economic_zone
- dbr:Fish
- dbr:Fish_scale
- dbr:Fisheries
- dbr:Flabby_whalefish
- dbr:Flatfish
- dbr:Flying_fish
- dbr:Food_and_Agriculture_Organization
- dbr:Acanthonus_armatus
- dbr:Barracudina
- dbr:Barreleye
- dbr:North_Atlantic
- dbr:North_Sea
- dbr:Otolith
- dbr:Capelin
- dbr:Carangidae
- dbr:Benthic
- dbr:Diffuse_reflection
- dbr:Edith_Widder
- dbr:Fangtooth
- dbr:Forage_fish
- dbr:Epipelagic_zone
- dbr:Ocean_current
- dbr:Sexual_dimorphism
- dbr:Species_diversity
- dbr:North_Equatorial_Current
- dbr:Highly_migratory_species
- dbr:Marine_hatchetfish
- dbr:Refuge_(ecology)
- dbr:Gonads
- dbr:Marine_snow
- dbr:Greeneye
- dbr:Gulf_of_Mexico
- dbr:Hagfish
- dbr:Halfbeak
- dbr:Hammerhead_shark
- dbr:Haplophryne_mollis
- dbr:Atlantic_bluefin_tuna
- dbr:Atlantic_pomfret
- dbr:Attenuation
- dbr:International_Union_for_Conservation_of_Nature
- dbr:Irish_Sea
- dbr:Jellyfish
- dbr:Bait_fish
- dbr:Anglerfishes
- dbr:Countershading
- dbr:Fish_(food)
- dbr:Peruvian_anchoveta
- dbr:Atlantic_herring
- dbr:Abyssal_plain
- dbr:Abyssobrotula_galatheae
- dbc:Ichthyology
- dbr:Chimaera
- dbr:Juvenile_fish
- dbr:Lake_Tanganyika_sardine
- dbr:Lampriformes
- dbr:Lanternfish
- dbr:Larvae
- dbr:Bigeye_tuna
- dbr:Bioluminescence
- dbr:Black_scabbardfish
- dbr:Black_swallower
- dbr:Blackfin_tuna
- dbr:Blue_whiting
- dbr:Bluefin_tuna
- dbr:Swordfish
- dbr:Coast
- dbr:Ecosystem
- dbr:Eelpout
- dbr:El_Niño
- dbr:Hermaphrodite
- dbr:Herring
- dbr:Jaw
- dbr:Trophic_level
- dbr:Oceanic_whitetip_shark
- dbr:Diatom
- dbr:Diel_vertical_migration
- dbr:Bonito
- dbr:Bycatch
- dbr:Pheromone
- dbr:Photosynthesize
- dbr:Phytoplankton
- dbr:Piscivore
- dbr:Plankton
- dbr:Porbeagle
- dbr:Sonar
- dbr:Spawn_(biology)
- dbr:Squid
- dbr:Filter_feeder
- dbr:Continental_slope
- dbr:Great_barracuda
- dbr:Humboldt_Current
- dbr:Dolphinfish
- dbr:Scombrid
- dbr:Kuroshio_Current
- dbr:Metabolism
- dbr:Microbe
- dbr:Brownsnout_spookfish
- dbr:Atheriniform
- dbr:Ocean
- dbr:Opah
- dbr:Ophidiidae
- dbr:Rattail
- dbr:Scuba_diving
- dbr:Sea_level
- dbr:Shark
- dbr:Shark_fin_soup
- dbr:Sharks
- dbr:Bristlemouth
- dbr:King_mackerel
- dbr:Swim_bladder
- dbr:Mackerel
- dbr:Marlin
- dbr:Rod_cell
- dbr:Seabird
- dbr:Shark_finning
- dbr:Skipjack_tuna
- dbr:United_Nations_Convention_on_the_Law_of_the_Sea
- dbr:Nekton
- dbr:Neoteny
- dbr:Sargassum_fish
- dbr:Longnose_lancetfish
- dbr:Eye
- dbr:IUCN_Red_List
- dbr:Thermocline
- dbr:Ocean_Tracking_Network
- dbr:Oily_fish
- dbr:Pacific_Ocean_Shelf_Tracking_Project
- dbr:Unicorn_crestfish
- dbr:Fish_aggregating_device
- dbr:Fish_migration
- dbr:Fish_stocks
- dbr:Fisheries_acoustics
- dbr:Fishing_vessel
- dbr:Gill
- dbr:Gill_raker
- dbr:Molidae
- dbr:Sprat
- dbr:Saury
- dbr:Phosichthyidae
- dbr:Water_column
- dbr:Pacific_bluefin_tuna
- dbr:Pacific_hagfish
- dbr:Sargassum
- dbr:Sabertooth_fish
- dbr:Pancake_batfish
- dbr:Ray-finned_fish
- dbr:Upwelling
- dbr:Mesopelagic
- dbr:Olfactory
- dbr:Ridgehead
- dbr:Myctophids
- dbr:Auxis_rochei
- dbr:Hadopelagic
- dbr:Wikt:fusiform
- dbr:Bathypelagic_zone
- dbr:Mahi_mahi
- dbr:Sauries
- dbr:Trevally
- dbr:Turbid
- dbr:Secchi_disc
- dbr:Pacific_sardine
- dbr:Blotched_fantail_ray
- dbr:PhysOrg.com
- dbr:Cartilaginous_fish
- dbr:Fishing_bank
- dbr:Fishing_by_country
- dbr:Land_runoff
- dbr:Albacore_tuna
- dbr:Abyssopelagic
- dbr:Abyssopelagic_zone
- dbr:Flyingfish
- dbr:Lower_jaw
- dbr:Marine_turtle
- dbr:Nearshore_waters
- dbr:High_seas
- dbr:Perciform
- dbr:Echinoid
- dbr:Purse_seine
- dbr:Reef_fish
- dbr:Baitfish
- dbr:Clupeiform
- dbr:Gulper_eel
- dbr:Lumpfish
- dbr:Seafloor
- dbr:Bramidae
- dbr:Seiner
- dbr:Neritic
- dbr:Predator_fish
- dbr:Spiderfish
- dbr:Swimbladder
- dbr:File:Flabby_whalefish.jpg
- dbr:File:Gonostoma_bathyphilum.jpg
- dbr:File:Isurus-oxyrinchus.jpg
- dbr:File:Ocean_surface_currents.jpg
- dbr:File:Moofushi_Kandu_fish.jpg
- dbr:File:Toothfish.jpg
- dbr:File:Humpback_anglerfish.png
- dbr:File:Sixfinger_threadfin_school.jpg
- dbr:File:Oceanic_basin.svg
- dbr:File:Oceanic_divisions.svg
- dbr:File:Wfm_pelagic.png
- dbr:File:La_Nina_and_Pacific_Decadal_Anomalies_-_April_2008.png
- dbr:File:Upwelling_image1.jpg
- Great barracuda accompanied by a school of jacks (en)
- Large epipelagic predator fish, such as this Atlantic bluefin tuna, have a deeply forked tail and a smooth body shaped like a spindle tapered at both ends and countershaded with silvery colours. (en)
- The camouflaged sargassum fish has evolved to live among drifting Sargassum seaweed. (en)
- Small epipelagic forage fish, such as this Atlantic herring, share similar body features as the predator fish described above. (en)
- Drifting Sargassum seaweed provides food and shelter for small epipelagic fish. The small round spheres are floats filled with carbon dioxide which provide buoyancy to the algae. (en)
- Lines of Sargassum can stretch for miles along the ocean surface. (en)
- Bluefin-big.jpg (en)
- Great Barracuda off the Netherland Antilles.jpg (en)
- Herring2.jpg (en)
- Histrio histrio by A. H. Baldwin.jpg (en)
- Lines of Sargassum.jpg (en)
- Sargassum weeds closeup.jpg (en)
- dbt:Cite_book
- dbt:Cite_journal
- dbt:Clear
- dbt:Commons_category
- dbt:Convert
- dbt:Cvt
- dbt:Div_col
- dbt:Div_col_end
- dbt:Doi
- dbt:ISBN
- dbt:Main
- dbt:Multiple_image
- dbt:Reflist
- dbt:See_also
- dbt:Short_description
- dbt:Use_British_English
- dbt:Use_dmy_dates
- dbt:Aquatic_ecosystem_topics
- dbt:Diversity_of_fish
- dbt:Marine_wild_fish_taxa
- dbt:Fishery_science_topics
- ( 이 문서는 수면 가까이에 사는 물고기에 관한 것입니다. 잉엇과의 민물고기에 대해서는 붕어 문서를 참고하십시오.) 부어(浮魚, 영어: pelagic fish)는 바닷물의 수면 가까이에 사는 물고기이다. 정어리, 고등어, 가다랑어 등이 있다. (ko)
- Pelagic fish live in the pelagic zone of ocean or lake waters—being neither close to the bottom nor near the shore—in contrast with demersal fish that do live on or near the bottom, and reef fish that are associated with coral reefs. The marine pelagic environment is the largest aquatic habitat on Earth, occupying 1,370 million cubic kilometres (330 million cubic miles), and is the habitat for 11% of known fish species. The oceans have a mean depth of 4,000 metres (2.5 miles). About 98% of the total water volume is below 100 metres (330 ft), and 75% is below 1,000 metres (3,300 ft). (en)
- Le pélagos est l'ensemble des organismes aquatiques (marins ou dulcicoles) qui occupent, dans une « colonne d'eau », la profondeur la plus proche de la surface, par opposition au benthos qui vit à proximité du fond. L'étymologie de ce mot vient du grec πέλαγος / pélagos (« la haute mer »). L'adjectif pélagique dérive de pélagos pour préciser qu'une espèce vit en pleine mer. Un chalut pélagique est utilisé dans la colonne d'eau, il n'est pas traîné sur le fond. (fr)
- Pelagische vissen zijn vissen die in de open zee leven, veelal op enige afstand van de kust en van de zeebodem. Sommige pelagische vissen zijn gedeeltelijke bewoners van kustwateren, en leven dus niet hun hele leven lang in de open zee. (nl)
- Пелагические рыбы — рыбы, обитающие в пелагической зоне океанов или озёр, в отличие от донных, которые живут на дне или у дна, и рифовых, связанных с прибрежной зоной. Морские пелагические воды — крупнейшая акватория на Земле, объём которой по разным оценкам составляет 1370 миллионов кубических километров. Она служит средой обитания для более 11 % известных ныне видов рыб. Средняя глубина океанов составляет 4000 м. Свыше 98 % объёма воды находится глубже 100 м, а более 75 % глубже 1000 м. (ru)
- dbr:Deep_sea_fish
- dbr:Demersal_fish
- dbr:Forage_fish
- dbr:Highly_migratory_species
- dbr:Benthic_fish
- dbr:Benthopelagic_fish
- dbr:Predator_fish
is dbo:wikiPageWikiLink of
- dbr:Caranx
- dbr:Carolowilhelmina
- dbr:Carpet_shark
- dbr:Cartorhynchus
- dbr:Beluga_(sturgeon)
- dbr:Ptychodus
- dbr:Rocky_Island_(Egypt)
- dbr:Sanuki_Shipbuilding_&_Iron_Works_Company
- dbr:Scomber
- dbr:Electrona_risso
- dbr:National_Coalition_for_Marine_Conservation
- dbr:Omul
- dbr:Parupeneus_multifasciatus
- dbr:Prickly_shark
- dbr:2020_in_paleoichthyology
- dbr:Bigeye_thresher
- dbr:Billfish
- dbr:Blue_Hole_(Guam)
- dbr:Blue_shark
- dbr:David_Cushing
- dbr:Anna_Oposa
- dbr:Aphareus_furca
- dbr:List_of_World_Heritage_Sites_in_Central_America
- dbr:List_of_examples_of_convergent_evolution
- dbr:Cyanea_annaskala
- dbr:Burley
- dbr:USS_Spearfish_(SS-190)
- dbr:Vision_in_fish
- dbr:Deep-sea_fish
- dbr:Deepwater_sculpin
- dbr:Dermogenys_brachynotopterus
- dbr:Integrated_Marine_and_Coastal_Regionalisation_of_Australia
- dbr:Mnemiopsis
- dbr:Rainbow_runner
- dbr:Ribbonfish
- dbr:Pelagic_pipefish
- dbr:Trawling
- dbr:Notothenia_coriiceps
- dbr:Notothenia_cyanobrancha
- dbr:World_fisheries_production
- dbr:Comoro_River
- dbr:Menai_Bay_Conservation_Area
- dbr:SS_Gothenburg
- dbr:Sailfish
- dbr:Sakura_shrimp
- dbr:Saltwater_crocodile
- dbr:Midwater_trawling
- dbr:Payaos
- dbr:Orange_roughy
- dbr:Warpaint_shiner
- dbr:Saltwater_fish
- dbr:Coastal_fish
- dbr:Cocos_Island
- dbr:Fraserburgh
- dbr:Fukushima_nuclear_disaster
- dbr:Great_Pacific_garbage_patch
- dbr:Greater_crested_tern
- dbr:Bottom_trawling
- dbr:Cooper_Reef
- dbr:Coregonus_artedi
- dbr:Cryodraco_antarcticus
- dbr:Laboratory_experiments_of_speciation
- dbr:Lagocephalus_laevigatus
- dbr:Bathypolypus_sponsalis
- dbr:Libagon
- dbr:Lisbon_Oceanarium
- dbr:Loes_River
- dbr:MV_Adolphus_Busch
- dbr:Magsasaka_Partylist
- dbr:Malapascua
- dbr:CalCOFI
- dbr:Chionodraco
- dbr:Shoaling_and_schooling
- dbr:Snipe_eel
- dbr:Stingray
- dbr:Stonewall_Bank_(Lincoln_County,_Oregon)
- dbr:Commercial_fish_feed
- dbr:Commerson's_dolphin
- dbr:Demersal_fish
- dbr:Demersal_zone
- dbr:Fauna_of_Ireland
- dbr:Fraser's_dolphin
- dbr:Freshwater_tyulka
- dbr:Funafuti_Conservation_Area
- dbr:Hammerjaw
- dbr:Horse_mackerel
- dbr:Magnisudis_atlantica
- dbr:Maldive_fish
- dbr:Spearfishing
- dbr:Tami_Islands
- dbr:Maritime_history_of_California
- dbr:Marlin_fishing
- dbr:2003_European_heat_wave
- dbr:Brim_hf.
- dbr:Agriculture_in_Lebanon
- dbr:Thresher_shark
- dbr:Tibar_Bay
- dbr:Tróndur_í_Gøtu_(2010_ship)
- dbr:Tumon_Bay
- dbr:Tuna
- dbr:Wild_Africa
- dbr:Wild_fisheries
- dbr:Dissostichus
- dbr:Diversity_of_fish
- dbr:Drift_netting
- dbr:Future_of_Marine_Animal_Populations
- dbr:Garfish
- dbr:Garum
- dbr:Hawksbill_sea_turtle
- dbr:Japanese_murrelet
- dbr:Lampara_net
- dbr:Long_Island_Sound
- dbr:No._67_Squadron_RAAF
- dbr:Adriatic_Sea
- dbr:African_penguin
- dbr:Africarium
- dbr:Agat_World_War_II_Amtrac
- dbr:Agulhas_Bank
- dbr:American_paddlefish
- dbr:Andaman_Sea
- dbr:Daedalus_Reef
- dbr:Darwin's_Arch
- dbr:Dusky_shark
- dbr:Economy_of_Kerala
- dbr:Ed_Ricketts
- dbr:Alosinae
- dbr:Exuma
- dbr:Fin
- dbr:Fish_fin
- dbr:Fish_for_finance
- dbr:Fishing_industry_in_the_Maldives
- dbr:Fishing_industry_in_the_United_States
- dbr:Angling
- dbr:Bald_notothen
- dbr:Brazilian_sharpnose_shark
- dbr:Nikolai_Vasilyevich_Parin
- dbr:Nino_Konis_Santana_National_Park
- dbr:Nordsøen_Oceanarium
- dbr:Norebo
- dbr:Northern_fur_seal
- dbr:Norway_Pelagic
- dbr:P._Alexander_Hulley
- dbr:Pago_Pago
- dbr:False_scad
- dbr:Fangtooth
- dbr:Footballfish
- dbr:Forage_fish
- dbr:Glossary_of_fishery_terms
- dbr:Gobionotothen_gibberifrons
- dbr:Handline_fishing
- dbr:History_of_whaling
- dbr:Kakaban
- dbr:Kapenta
- dbr:Kelp_forest
- dbr:King-of-the-salmon
- dbr:Striped_dolphin
- dbr:Refuge_(ecology)
- dbr:Southern_right_whale_dolphin
- dbr:Mario_Puratić
- dbr:Atlantic_saury
- dbr:Atlantic_torpedo
- dbr:Istanbul
- dbr:Bait_ball
- dbr:Teleost
- dbr:Hyperoglyphe_perciformis
- dbr:Hyphessobrycon_clavatus
- dbr:Hypoplectrus_guttavarius
- dbr:Jellyfish_bloom
- dbr:Masked_hamlet
- dbr:Sebastes_schlegelii
- dbr:Solenostomus_paegnius
- dbr:Atlantic_Ocean
- dbr:Acrocirridae
- dbr:Kaunolu_Village_Site
- dbr:Kerala
- dbr:Labrador_Sea
- dbr:Lake_Mweru
- dbr:Lanternfish
- dbr:Billfish_in_the_Indian_Ocean
- dbr:Biodiversity_action_plan
- dbr:Black_Sea_bottlenose_dolphin
- dbr:Blackfin_tuna
- dbr:Blackstripe_herring
- dbr:Blob_sculpin
- dbr:Bluefish
- dbr:Swordfish
- dbr:Ecology_of_the_San_Francisco_Estuary
- dbr:Herring_scad
- dbr:Trolling_(fishing)
- dbr:Whitefish_(fisheries_term)
- dbr:Diodon_eydouxii
- dbr:Direction_Island_(Exmouth_Gulf)
- dbr:Arripis_trutta
- dbr:Manta_ray
- dbr:Marine_coastal_ecosystem
- dbr:Marine_habitats
- dbr:Marine_life
- dbr:Marine_plastic_pollution
- dbr:Marine_vertebrate
- dbr:Burmeister's_porpoise
- dbr:Porbeagle
- dbr:Porpoise
- dbr:Portugal
- dbr:Spanish_mackerel
- dbr:Spawn_(biology)
- dbr:St_Helena_Bay
- dbr:Grey_reef_shark
- dbr:Humboldt_Current
- dbr:Humboldt_penguin
- dbr:Mesopelagic_fish
- dbr:Ichaboe_Island
- dbr:Inter-American_Tropical_Tuna_Commission
- dbr:Cetomimidae
- dbr:Chagos_Marine_Protected_Area
- dbr:Sea_of_Japan
- dbr:Seafood
- dbr:Seas_west_of_Scotland
- dbr:Selayar_Island
- dbr:Wolf_Island
- dbr:Women_in_Eritrea
- dbr:Xiphodolamia
- dbr:Taka_Bonerate_Islands
- dbr:Longfin_yellowtail
- dbr:Longneck_eel
- dbr:Longspine_squirrelfish
- dbr:Mackerel
- dbr:Skipjack_tuna
- dbr:Upper_Paleolithic
- dbr:Nekton
- dbr:Port_of_Skagen
- dbr:Eyed_flounder
- dbr:Factory_ship
- dbr:Little_tunny
- dbr:Oily_fish
- dbr:Transshipment_at_sea
- dbr:Fish_aggregating_device
- dbr:Fish_as_food
- dbr:Fish_fillet
- dbr:Fish_migration
- dbr:Fish_stocks
- dbr:Fishing_in_Pakistan
- dbr:Fishing_industry_in_Scotland
- dbr:Fishing_industry_in_Thailand
- dbr:Fishing_lure
- dbr:Fishing_net
- dbr:Fishing_techniques
- dbr:Flathead_grey_mullet
- dbr:Giant_kelp_marine_forests_of_south_east_Australia
- dbr:Gillnetting
- dbr:Sawtooth_eel
- dbr:Molgula_occidentalis
- dbr:Phylliroe
- dbr:Norges_Sildesalgslag
- dbr:Swima
- dbr:Terebellida
- dbr:Outline_of_fish
- dbr:Outline_of_fisheries
- dbr:Outline_of_fishing
- dbr:Overfishing
- dbr:Scophthalmidae
- dbr:Swima_bombiviridis
- dbr:Sustainable_seafood
- dbr:Surimi
- dbr:Rare_velvetfish
- dbr:Upwelling
- dbr:Wax_ester
- dbr:Richelieu_Rock
- dbr:Ridgehead
- dbr:Robert_Henry_Gibbs
- dbr:Yellow-bellied_sea_snake
- dbr:Stomias_affinis
- dbr:Ocean_fish
- dbr:Oceanic_fish
- dbr:Offshore_fish
- dbr:Tiburonia
- dbr:Sphyraena_pinguis
- dbr:Spiny_icefish
- dbr:Epipelagic_fish
- dbr:Bathypelagic_fish
- dbr:Pelagic_finfish
- dbr:Deep_water_fish
- dbr:Surface_fish