Citations:sábalo

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English citations of sábalo

  • 1916, George F. Weeks, The Mexican Review, page 24:
    The Sábalo or milkfish (Chanos chanos), known in Hawaii as the awa, is also very abundant, []
  • 1980, Michael D. Coe, Richard A. Diehl, In the Land of the Olmec: The people of the river:
    Among sport fishermen , the mighty Atlantic tarpon or sábalo (Megalops atlanticus) is considered one of the greatest of all [...] The villagers know that the sábalo lives in the sea ; when the Coatzacoalcos rises, it travels up the Río []
  • 2007 June 3, Martin H. Iriondo, Juan César Paggi, María Julieta Parma, The Middle Paraná River: Limnology of a Subtropical Wetland, Springer Science & Business Media, →ISBN, page 308:
    Species represented in the channel during the hydrological cycle were the “sábalo”, P. lineatus, the “patí” catfish, Luciopimelodus pati, the “moncholo” catfish, P. albicans, and the “surubí” catfish, P. coruscans, being P. lineatus and []
  • (Can we date this quote?), S. Shephard, , J. Valbo-Jorgensen, J. Abadía, C. Baigún, C.R.C. Doria, N.N. Fabré, V.J. Isaac, P.B. Ngor, M.L. Ruffino, S.J. Funge-Smith, Size-based assessment of data-limited inland fish stocks – Review and applications, Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, →ISBN, page 39:
    The sábalo (Prochilodus lineatus) represents up to 60 percent of the fish biomass in ... The sábalo exhibit different types of migratory movements adapted to cope with thermal regime and hydrological variability (Sverlij, Espinach Ros []
  • 1992, Kent Hubbard Redford, Christine Padoch, Conservation of Neotropical Forests: Working from Traditional Resource Use, Columbia University Press, →ISBN, page 75:
    The sabalo and sabaleta ( Brycon spp . ) , the mojarra , and the saña ( catfish ) are the most common fish con- sumed by the Awa . Fishing tools and techniques consist mostly of traps designed by the Awa themselves ( now widely used []