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- Burbot - Wikipedia
It is the only member of the genus Lota, and is the only freshwater species of the order Gadiformes The species is closely related to marine fish such as the common ling and cusk, all of which belong to the family Lotidae (rocklings)
- The Real Poor Man’s Lobster? This Mysterious Native Fish Is Seeing a . . .
At first glance, a burbot looks like some sort of large, slimy eel But, there’s much more to this native fish than meets the eye Burbot, commonly known as eelpout, can be found throughout the Northern hemisphere, primarily in Canada, Alaska, and along the Northern border of the lower 48
- Burbot | Washington Department of Fish Wildlife
Burbot is a cold-adapted species whose distribution, behavior, and physiology is limited by warmer water temperatures Warmer water temperatures limit dispersal to more southerly locations and influence behavior and physiology in current habitat
- Burbot | Range Facts | Britannica
Burbot, elongated fish of the family Lotidae that inhabits cold rivers and lakes of Europe, Asia, and North America A bottom dweller found in both fresh and brackish waters, it descends as deep as 700 metres (about 2,300 feet)
- Burbot - Facts, Diet, Habitat Pictures on Animalia. bio
The burbot (Lota lota), also known as bubbot, mariah, loche, cusk, freshwater cod, freshwater ling, freshwater cusk, the lawyer, coney-fish, lingcod, or eelpout, is a species of coldwater ray-finned fish native to the subarctic regions of the Northern hemisphere
- Burbot (Lota lota) - Species Profile - Nonindigenous Aquatic Species
Means of Introduction: Intentionally stocked legally and illegally for sport fishing Status: Established in Connecticut, Illinois, Indiana, New Jersey, Ohio, and Pennsylvania
- Alaska Fish: Burbot - Alaskan Nature
The burbot has a thin, elongated body that tapers to a point near the tail Its major distinguishing characteristics are a barbel or "chin whisker", and dorsal and anal fins that run from the middle of the body almost to the tail
- Meet the burbot: The slimy fish that only spawns in winter
The burbot gets its name from the Middle French word borbeter, meaning to wallow in mud, fitting for a fish that lives at the bottom of bodies of water It is one of the few fish species in Vermont to spawn during winter
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