(added CMR tab)
mNo edit summary
 
(3 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown)
Line 3: Line 3:
{{Infobox
{{Infobox
  | title  = {{PAGENAME}}
  | title  = {{PAGENAME}}
  | image =  
  | image = [[File:mullets.jpeg|200px]]
  | headerstyle  =  background:#595958; color:#f9f9f9;
  | headerstyle  =  background:#595958; color:#f9f9f9;
  | header1 = Layer Info
  | header1 = Layer Info
Line 12: Line 12:
}}
}}
==Description==
==Description==
Mullets have worldwide distribution and inhabit tropical and temperate seas; a few spend their lives in freshwater (Nelsonv, 2006). These ray-finned fish belong to the Mugilidae family (wikipedia, n.d.) which includes 17 genera and 72 species in the world (Harrison and Senou, 1999; Nelson, 2006). Eight species of Mugilidae inhabit the Mediterranean Sea, and originally classified as part of the single genus Mugil, under different names (M. cephalus, M. ramada, M. labrosus, M. labeo, M. aurata, M. abu, M. saliens, M. carinata) (in Turan C. et al., 2009).
Adults are found in coastal waters, often entering estuaries and rivers, sometimes far-up-river, lagoons and hypersaline environments. They are usually in schools over sand or mud bottom, between 0 and 10 m, occurring equally in tropical, subtropical and temperate waters. They are mainly diurnal, feeding on detritus, micro-algae and benthic organisms. Juveniles feed on zooplankton. Reproduction takes place at sea, at various times of the year depending on the location. Adults form schools and migrate offshore to spawn and developing larvae migrate back inshore. There is absence of an obligatory freshwater phase in the life cycle (fishbase, n.d.).
Adults are found in coastal waters, often entering estuaries and rivers, sometimes far-up-river, lagoons and hypersaline environments. They are usually in schools over sand or mud bottom, between 0 and 10 m, occurring equally in tropical, subtropical and temperate waters. They are mainly diurnal, feeding on detritus, micro-algae and benthic organisms. Juveniles feed on zooplankton. Reproduction takes place at sea, at various times of the year depending on the location. Adults form schools and migrate offshore to spawn and developing larvae migrate back inshore. There is absence of an obligatory freshwater phase in the life cycle (fishbase, n.d.).


Source:
Source:
https://fishbase.mnhn.fr/. n.d.  
https://fishbase.mnhn.fr/. n.d.  
Turan C., Gürlek M., Ergüden D., Yağlıoğlu D., Öztürk B. (2009). ''Systematic Status of Nine Mullet Species (Mugilidae) in the Mediterranean Sea. Turkish Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences 11: 315-321 (2011) .'' Available at https://www.academia.edu/22846963/_Mugilidae_in_the_Mediterranean_Sea
Return to [[Categories and Layers#tab=Shipping|fish]]


=North Sea=
=North Sea=
Line 27: Line 33:
=Adriatic Sea=
=Adriatic Sea=
Not applicable. This layer is not present in the Adriatic Sea Edition.
Not applicable. This layer is not present in the Adriatic Sea Edition.
Wikipedia (n.d.). https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mullet_%28fish%29. Acessed on 16 December 2024.


= Eastern Mediterranean Sea =
= Eastern Mediterranean Sea =

Latest revision as of 13:00, 16 December 2024

Mullet
Mullets.jpeg
Layer Info
Category Ecology
Sub-category Fish
Editable No

Description

Mullets have worldwide distribution and inhabit tropical and temperate seas; a few spend their lives in freshwater (Nelsonv, 2006). These ray-finned fish belong to the Mugilidae family (wikipedia, n.d.) which includes 17 genera and 72 species in the world (Harrison and Senou, 1999; Nelson, 2006). Eight species of Mugilidae inhabit the Mediterranean Sea, and originally classified as part of the single genus Mugil, under different names (M. cephalus, M. ramada, M. labrosus, M. labeo, M. aurata, M. abu, M. saliens, M. carinata) (in Turan C. et al., 2009).

Adults are found in coastal waters, often entering estuaries and rivers, sometimes far-up-river, lagoons and hypersaline environments. They are usually in schools over sand or mud bottom, between 0 and 10 m, occurring equally in tropical, subtropical and temperate waters. They are mainly diurnal, feeding on detritus, micro-algae and benthic organisms. Juveniles feed on zooplankton. Reproduction takes place at sea, at various times of the year depending on the location. Adults form schools and migrate offshore to spawn and developing larvae migrate back inshore. There is absence of an obligatory freshwater phase in the life cycle (fishbase, n.d.).

Source: https://fishbase.mnhn.fr/. n.d. Turan C., Gürlek M., Ergüden D., Yağlıoğlu D., Öztürk B. (2009). Systematic Status of Nine Mullet Species (Mugilidae) in the Mediterranean Sea. Turkish Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences 11: 315-321 (2011) . Available at https://www.academia.edu/22846963/_Mugilidae_in_the_Mediterranean_Sea


Return to fish

Not applicable. This layer is not present in the North Sea Edition.

Not applicable. This layer is not present in the Baltic Sea Edition.

Not applicable. This layer is not present in the Clyde Marine Region Edition.

Not applicable. This layer is not present in the Adriatic Sea Edition. Wikipedia (n.d.). https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mullet_%28fish%29. Acessed on 16 December 2024.

Types

  • Very Low Density
  • Low Density
  • Medium Density
  • High Density
  • Very High Density

Metadata

Data Source

Mullet is a month-by-month, computer generated data layers following calculations made by the ecosystem simulation (EwE). The simplified EwE Eastern Mediterranean model was adjusted for use in the MSP Challenge by Eyal Ofir.

For more information on how Ecopath-with-Ecosim (EwE) works, please visit our Wiki page or visit the official EwE website at https://ecopath.org.

This page was last edited on 16 December 2024, at 13:00. Content is available under GPLv3 unless otherwise noted.