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COD

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V06, Page 632 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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COD  , the name given to the typical

fish of the
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family Gadidae, of the Teleostean suborder Anacanthini, the position of which has much varied in our classifications . Having no spines to their fins, the Gadids used, in Cuvierian days, to be associated with the herrings, Salmonids, pike, &c., in the artificially-conceived order of Malacopterygians, or soft-finned bony fishes . But, on the ground of their air-bladder being closed, or deprived of a pneumatic duct communicating with the
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digestive canal, such as is characteristic of the Malacopterygians, they were removed from them and placed with the flat-fishes, or Pleuronectidae, in a suborder Anacanthini, regarded as intermediate in position between the Acanthopterygians, or spiny-finned fishes, and the Malacopterygians . It has, however, been shown that the flat-fishes bear no relationship to the Gadids, but are most nearly akin to the John Dories (see DoRY) . The suborder Anaoanthini is, nevertheless, maintained for the Muraenolepididae Gadids and two related families, Macruridae and Muraenolepididae, and may be thus defined:—Air-bladder without open duct . Parietal bones separated by the supra-occipital; prootic and exoccipital separated by the enlarged opisthotic .
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Pectoral arch suspended from the
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skull; no mesocoracoid arch . Ventral fins below or in front of the pectorals, the pelvic bones posterior to the clavicular symphysis and only loosely attached to it by ligament . Fins without spines; caudal fin, if
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present, without
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expanded hypural, perfectly symmetrical, and supported by the neural and haemal spines of the posterior vertebrae, and by basal bones similar to those supporting the dorsal and anal rays . This type of caudal fin must be regarded as secondary, the Gadidae being, no doubt, derived from fishes in which the homocercal fin of the typical Teleostean had been lost . About 120
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species of Gadids are distinguished, mostly marine, many being adapted to
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life at
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great depths; all are carnivorous . They inhabit chiefly the
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northern seas, but many abyssal forms occur between the tropics and in the
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southern parts of the
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Atlantic and Pacific .

They are represented in

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British waters by eight genera, and about twenty species, only one of which, the
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burbot (Lota vulgaris), is an inhabitant of fresh waters . Several of the marine species are of first-
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rate economic importance . The genus Gadus is characterized by having three dorsal and two anal fins, and a truncated or notched caudal fin . In the cod and haddock the
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base of the first anal fin is not, or but slightly, longer than that of the second dorsal fin; in the whiting,
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pout,
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coal-fish, pollack, hake, ling and burbot, the former is considerably longer than the latter . The cod, Gadus morrhua, possesses, in
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common with the other members of the genus, three dorsal and two anal fins, and a single barbel, at least
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half as long as the eye, at the
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chin . It is a widely-distributed species, being found throughout the northern and temperate seas of
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Europe,
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Asia and
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America, extending as far south as
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Gibraltar, but not entering the Mediterranean, and inhabits
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water from 25 to 50 fathoms deep, where it always feeds close to the bottom . It is exceedingly voracious, feeding on the smaller denizens of the ocean—fish, crustaceans,
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worms and molluscs, and greedily taking almost any bait the fisherman chooses to employ . The cod spawns in
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February, and is exceedingly prolific, the roe of a single
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female having been known to contain upwards of eight millions of ova, and to form more than half the
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weight of the entire fish . Only a small proportion of these get fertilized, and still fewer ever emerge from the egg . The number of cod is still further reduced by the trade carried on in roe, large quantities of which are used in France as ground-bait in the sardine fishery, while it also forms an article of human food . The young are about an inch in length by the end of spring, but are not
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fit for the market till the second
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year, and it has been stated that they do not reach maturity, as shown by the power of
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reproduction, till the end of their third year . They usually measure about 3 ft. in length, and weigh from 12 to 20 lb, but specimens have been taken from So to 70 lb in weight .

As an article of food the cod-fish is in greatest perfection duringthe three months preceding

Christmas . It is caught on all parts of the British and Irish coasts, but the Dogger
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Bank, and Rockall, off the
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Outer Hebrides, have been specially noted for their cod-
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fisheries . The fishery is also carried on along the coast of Norfolk and Suffolk, where great quantities of the fish are caught with hook and
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line, and conveyed to market alive in " well-boats " specially built for this
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traffic . Such boats have been in use since the beginning of the 18th century . The most important cod-fishery in the
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world is that which has been prosecuted for centuries on the
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Newfoundland banks, where it is not uncommon fora single fisherman to take over 500 of these fish in ten or eleven hours . These, salted and dried, are exported to all parts of the world, and form, when taken in connexion with the enormous quantity of fresh cod consumed, a valuable addition to the food resources of the human
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race . The air-bladder of this fish furnishes isinglass, little, if at all, inferior to that obtained from the sturgeon, while from the liver is obtained cod-liver oil, largely used in
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medicine as a remedy in scrofulous complaints and pulmonary consumption (see COD-LIVER OIL) . " The Norwegians," says Cuvier, " give cod-heads with marine
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plants to their cows for the purpose of producing a greater proportion of milk . The vertebrae, the ribs, and the bones in general, are given to their cattle by the Icelanders, and by the Kamtchatdales to their
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dogs . These same parts, properly dried, are also employed as fuel in the desolate
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steppes of the Icy Sea." At
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Port Logan in Wigtonshire cod-fish are kept in a large
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reservoir, scooped out of the solid rock by the
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action of the sea, egress from which is prevented by a barrier of stones, which does not prevent the
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free access of the water . These cod are fed chiefly on mussels, and when the keeper approaches to feed them they may be seen rising to the
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surface in hundreds and eagerly seeking the edge . They have become comparatively tame and familiar .

Frank Buckland, who visited the place, states that after a little while they allowed him to take hold of them, scratch them on the back, and
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play with them in various ways . Their flavour is considered
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superior to that of the cod taken in the open sea . (G . A .

End of Article: COD
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COCYTUS (mod. Vuvo)
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CODA (Ital. for " tail "; from the Lat. cauda)

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