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Encyclopedia > Chanidae


Milkfish

Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Actinopterygii
Order: Gonorynchiformes
Family: Chanidae
Genus: Chanos
Species: chanos
Binomial name
Chanos chanos
(Forsskål, 1775)

The milkfish (Chanos chanos) is an important food fish in Southeast Asia. It is the sole living species in the family Chanidae (about seven extinct species in five additional genera have been reported).


Milkfish have a generally symmetrical and streamlined appearance, with a sizable forked caudal fin. They can grow to 1.7 m, but are most often about 1 meter in length. They have no teeth, and generally feed on algae and Indian Ocean and across the Pacific Ocean, tending to school around coasts and islands with reefs. The youngest larvae live at sea for 2–3 weeks, then migrate to mangrove swamps, estuaries, and sometimes lakes, returning to sea to mature sexually and reproduce.


The larvae are collected from rivers and raised in ponds, where they can be fed almost anything and grow very quickly, then are sold either fresh, frozen, canned, or smoked.


Reference

External links



  Results from FactBites:
 
A revision of the ostariophysan fish family Chanidae, with special reference to the Mesozoic forms (246 words)
The diagnosis, composition, and phylogenetic relationships of the Chanidae, an ostariophysan fish family of the order Gonorynchiformes, are revised.
The monophyly of the Chanidae is confirmed on the basis of fourteen synapomorphies, nine of which are uniquely derived characters.
Rubiesichthys and Gordichthys are the oldest fossil record of the family Chanidae and of the order Gonorynchiformes.
Milkfish - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (249 words)
It is the sole living species in the family Chanidae (about seven extinct species in five additional genera have been reported).
Because milkfish is notorious for being much more bony compared to other food fish in the country, deboned milkfish or "boneless bangus" has become popular and common in stores and markets.
This page was last modified 20:26, 25 August 2006.
  More results at FactBites »

 

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