Online Encyclopedia

SHAD

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V24, Page 758 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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SHAD  , the name given to certain migratory

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species of herrings (Clupea), which are distinguished from the herrings proper by the
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total absence of teeth in the jaws . Two species occur in
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Europe, much resembling each other—one commonly called allis shad (Clupea alosa or Alosa vulgaris), and the other known as twaite shad(Clupea finta or Alosa finta) . Both, like the majority of herrings, are greenish on the back and silvery on the sides, but they are distinguished from the other
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European species Clupea by the presence of a large blackish blotch behind the gill-opening, which is succeeded by a series of several other similar spots along the
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middle of the side of the
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body . So closely allied are these two fishes that their distinctness can be proved only by an examination of the gill-apparatus, the allis shad having from sixty to eighty very
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fine and long gill-rakers along the
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concave edge of the first branchial arch, whilst the twaite shad possesses from twenty-one to twenty-seven stout and stiff gill-rakers only . In their habits and
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geographical distribution also the two shads are similar . They inhabit the . coasts of temperate Europe, the twaite shad being more numerous in the Mediterranean . While they are in salt
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water they live singly or in very small companies, but during May (the twaite shad some weeks later) they congregate, and in
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great numbers ascend large rivers, such as the Severn (and formerly the
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Thames), the Seine, the Rhine, the Nile, &c., in order to deposit their spawn . A few weeks after they drop down the
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river, lean and exhausted, numbers floating dead on the
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surface, so that only a small proportion seem to regain the sea . At
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Elbeuf on the Seine above
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Rouen there was formerly a hatchery for the artificial
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propagation of shad . The eggs are spawned in May and
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June, and are similar in the two species; they are heavier than the fresh water in which they develop, but unlike the herring's eggs they are not adhesive . They remain
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free and
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separate at the bottom of the river, carried down by the current or up by the tide . In the Elbe the twaite shad spawns below
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Hamburg, the allis shad above
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Dresden .

In

November the fry have reached 3 to 5 in. in length, but very few specimens in their second
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year have been found in rivers . The majority seem to descend to the sea before their first winter, to return when mature . On rivers in which these fishes make their periodical appearance they have become the
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object of a
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regular fishery . They are much esteemed on the middle Rhine, where they are generally known as " Maifisch." The allis shad is caught at a
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size from 15 to 24 in., and is better flavoured than the twaite shad, which is generally smaller . Other, but closely allied species, occur on the
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Atlantic coasts of North
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America, all surpassing the European species in importance as food-fishes and economic value, viz., the
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American shad (Clupea sapidissima), the gaspereau or
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ale-wife (C. mattowocca or vernalis), and the
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menhaden (C. menhaden) .

End of Article: SHAD
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SHABATS (also written Shabatz and Sabac)
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SHADDOCK (Citrus decumana)

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