Hake |
||
|
Family: Merluccidae Species: Merluccius bilinearis - Silver Hake Silver Hake grows to a length of 30 inches (75 cm) and up to 5 lbs (2.3 kg). It has a brown coloration with some silvery irridescence fading into pure silver on the belly. It also has 5-7 dark, irregular, vertical bars. It is usually found on or near the bottom in deep water of the continental shelf from Maryland to the Newfoundland Banks. It has a good flavor, but the taste deteriorates rapidly after being caught, and isn't a sport fish. Therefore, it is only taken as bycatch in the commercial fisheries.
Merluccius productus - Pacific Hake
Urophycis chuss - Red Hake
Urophycis tenuis - White Hake An old European source mentions a hake that was transplanted from the coast of Ireland to Cape Cod. It is uncertain which species this is, but the reference is given below: This is an Irish salt water fish, similar in appearance to the tom cod. In Galway bay, and other sea inlets of Ireland, the hake is exceedingly abundant, and is taken in great numbers. It is also found in England and France. Since the Irish immigration to America, the hake has followed in the wake of their masters, as it is now found in New York bay, in the waters around Boston, and off Cape Cod. Here it is called the stock fish, and the Bostonians call them poor Johns. It is a singular fact that until within a few years this fish was never seen in America. It doesn't grow so large here as in Europe, though here they are from ten to eighteen inches in length. The general color of this fish is a reddish brown, with some golden tints - the sides being of a pink silvery luster. |
||
Give us credits |
||