Salmon is a large silver-colored fish found in both freshwater and marine waters. Has eight fins including tail, arranged in pairs on each side. Lives in North Atlantic and Pacific oceans, migrating between freshwater and oceans. Term 'salmon' comes from Latin 'Salmo' meaning 'to leap'
Salmon lives in both Pacific and Atlantic Oceans. Born in freshwater streams, migrate to sea and return to spawn. Feeds on smaller fish, crustaceans, squid, insects, and plankton
Native to northwestern Pacific Ocean from Japan to Vietnam. Amphidromous species moving between marine and freshwater environments. Maximum size typically 30 cm, some reach up to 70 cm. Two to three subspecies recognized, including endangered Ryukyu ayu
Smelts are small freshwater fish found in oceans, rivers, and lakes worldwide. Most species rarely exceed 20 cm in length, some reaching 25-40 cm. Many species are anadromous, living in sea and breeding in freshwater
Bass fish live in St. Lawrence, Great Lakes, Hudson Bay, and Mississippi river basins. Common bream reaches 90cm length and 9.1kg weight in European rivers. Carp fish are oily freshwater species native to Europe and Asia. Catfish have three largest species, including Mekong giant and Paraiba. Chinook salmon hatch in freshwater streams and migrate to saltwater
Haddock is a deep-sea marine fish native to North Atlantic. Scientific name is Melanogrammus aeglefinus, meaning "black line" in Greek. Measures 1-3 feet in length and weighs up to 40 pounds. Has distinctive black/purplish line along back and "Devil's thumbprint" markings