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  2. Fish Heads (song) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fish_Heads_(song)

    "Fish Heads" is a novelty song by comedy rock duo Barnes & Barnes, released as a single in 1978 and later featured on their 1980 album Voobaha. [1] It is the most requested song on the Dr. Demento radio show, and a music video for the song made in 1980 was in regular rotation on MTV .

  3. Lysmata amboinensis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lysmata_amboinensis

    L. amboinesis is also commonly found living in caves with their client fish, such as moray eels, providing the shrimp with protection from predators. [14] Because of the benefits of cleaner shrimp to the fish they clean, Lysmata amboinensis and other species have been suggested as potentially useful to aquaculture. [12]

  4. Smelt (fish) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smelt_(fish)

    Fish are spotted using a flashlight or headlamp and scooped out of the water using a dip net made of nylon or metal mesh. The smelt are cleaned by removing the head and the entrails. Fins, scales, and bones of all but the largest of smelts are cooked without removal.

  5. Parambassis ranga - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parambassis_ranga

    Parambassis ranga, commonly known as the Indian glassy fish, Indian glassy perch, or Indian X-ray fish, is a species of freshwater fish in the Asiatic glassfish family Ambassidae of order Perciformes.

  6. Kosher animals - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kosher_animals

    Nachmanides believed that the restrictions against certain fish also addressed health concerns, arguing that fish with fins and scales (and hence ritually clean) typically live in shallower waters than those without fins or scales (i.e., those that were ritually impure), and consequently the latter were much colder and more humid, qualities he ...

  7. Blue grenadier - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blue_grenadier

    The blue grenadier (also known as hoki, blue hake, New Zealand whiptail, or whiptail hake, Macruronus novaezelandiae) is a merluccid hake of the family Merlucciidae found around southern Australia and New Zealand, as well as off both the Atlantic and Pacific coasts of South America from Peru to Brazil [1] at depths of between 10 and 1,000 m (33 and 3,300 ft).

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