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Fish Families
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The Insect Nursery
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Nurseries in Birdland
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Nurseries in Birdland (continued)
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Meal-Time in Birdland
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Lesson-Time in Birdland
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The Babes in the Wood
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The Babes in the Wood (continued)
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Beware of the Enemy
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Playtime
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Playtime (continued)
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Fish Families
BABY fish, like baby frogs, when they first see the world are quite unlike their
parents. The sea swarms with countless numbers of these fish-babies: if you
scooped up some of them in a bucket, you would hardly know that they were fish.
But let us begin at the beginning—the egg!
A bird's egg, as we all know, is a hard shell containing "white" and yolk. Is
that all? No, we have left out the most important part, called the germ. The
chick is formed neither from the yolk nor the "white," but from a minute
"germ." This is a speck of life, but, by living on the large yellow yolk, and the
transparent "white," it grows and grows, and by slow degrees becomes a perfect
chick. The yolk is so large, and is such rich food, that it lasts until the
chick is perfectly formed and ready to burst through the hard walls of its
prison.
The baby fish is not so well off. It comes out of a tiny egg, in which is no
room for a rich store of food for the germ to live on. So, of course, it cannot
wait within the egg until it is a perfect fish, but must come out and face the
world as an imperfect one. In this baby form it is known as a larval fish.
The bird baby is well off, for, on leaving the egg, it is a small copy of its
parents, while the fish or frog, coming from a starved little egg, is merely a
larva. It has to become a perfect fish or frog outside the shelter of the egg!
We might compare it with the child of poor parents, forced to go into the big
world before it has really grown up!
Frogs' eggs are easy to keep: most of us have watched them hatch into tadpoles,
and the tadpoles develop into small frogs. But fish-eggs are more difficult to
keep: so let us suppose we have dived into the clear water of a sparkling
stream where we can see the eggs of a trout. They were laid in the clean gravel
bed, several hundred of them, nearly three months ago! Although the fish did
her best to cover them over with gravel, many have been gobbled up by ducks,
eels, and other enemies; but those that escaped are now ready to hatch.
Each egg breaks, and out wriggles a queer little object with two black discs on
its head—its eyes. Can this odd-looking scrap of life ever become a handsome,
strong, speckled trout? As it lies on its side, tired out with the exertion of
escaping from prison, we notice a queer lump fastened to the underside of its
body. What can it be?
It is a part of the egg-yolk; and for the next few
weeks the baby fish depends on it for food. If you like, you can call it the
baby's feeding-bottle. Only, as you will notice in our picture (below), the
feeding-bottle is not connected with the baby's mouth, but with its body! Why
is that?
Trout Alevin—When first hatched, trout are known as "Alevin."
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The reason is a strange one. The throat, or food-pipe, is at first closed up,
therefore the baby would starve and die, but for the remains of
egg-yolk in the
"feeding-bottle." This store of food keeps the little creature alive, and it
can stay hidden away in the gravel while it is so weak and helpless.
So the weeks go by: our baby fish escapes its many enemies, comes out of
hiding, and we see
it chasing and eating small things, such as water-fleas.
Its food-bag has now
all gone. It begins to look more like a fish. It has a good appetite for small
worms, grubs, and fresh-water shrimps, and so grows up to be a lovely, shining,
red-spotted Trout.
Now all fish do not begin life quite in that way, but a great many do. As the
eggs and babies have no nursery, and no parents to protect them, many are
destroyed; to make up for this, each female fish must lay a great number of
eggs. Some of our river-fish lay many,
but sea-fish take first prize for huge
families. The Cod, for instance, lays millions of eggs, the Flounder more than
1,000,000, and the Herring from 20,000 to 40,000!
The Herring, Cod, and most of the fish you see in the fish-shop, are very
careless parents. They simply shed their spawn into the sea, and swim away as if
nothing had happened! We must notice, however, that they do not lay their eggs
just anywhere in the great ocean, but in certain parts. They choose suitable
water, neither too cold nor too warm, neither too deep nor too shallow!
This habit is a most important one—for us as well as for them. The Herring likes
to shed its eggs in fairly shallow water. The Cod gather in millions off the
coast of Newfoundland, where the water is perfect for the eggs, the babies, and
the grown-up Cod as well. Now fishermen study these habits of fish: they know
when and where to find the mighty shoals of Herring as they travel to the
spawning-beds: and we all know of the famous
Cod-fishery of the foggy Banks of
Newfoundland.
The eggs of these fish do not take months to hatch, like those of the Trout, but
a few days only. When we consider the dangers they run it is surprising that so
many fish remain! The shoals of Herring, for instance, are beyond count! In
the year 1927 no fewer than 21 million of these fish were landed by Yarmouth
fishing boats in one day, and the total catch for one week, at this seaport
only, was 85 million Herrings!
All fish are not so careless of their eggs as the Herring, Cod, etc. The Trout
and Salmon, for instance, hide them under gravel: others do more than this, and
make nests: and some, like our common Stickleback, or "Red-Throat" as boys
call him, even guard their eggs and young. Most of us have seen how fiercely
this handsome little fellow guards his property. How he makes brave charges at
intruders, with spines set like fixed bayonets. He is ready to fight anyone and
everyone; in his Spring suit of green and red and gold, he shines like a jewel
against the mud of his watery home.
Nest of Stickleback
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Scattered all over the world are other nest-building fish: and, like the birds,
each has its own idea of the best kind of nest to make. Strange to say, there
are fish which have a special pocket of skin in which to carry the eggs. The
common Pipe-fish (which you may see at the Zoo,
or sometimes at the fish-shop,
or in nets at the seaside) is one of these fish with pockets. Another queer
fish, to be found in tropical seas (and also at the Zoo!) carries the eggs in
its mouth and gills, until they hatch! Needless to say, this fish is content
with a small family of 20 or 30.
Round our own coasts may be found fish which place their eggs in empty shells,
and mount guard over them. Others there are which press their eggs into rock
crevices, and protect them with their own bodies from roving enemies.
But fish that build nurseries, or guard their families in any way, are rare. As
a rule, there is no nursery life for the baby fish. After leaving the egg, it
finds itself helpless in a world of enemies. The chances are that it will soon
be found by one of them, and speedily eaten!
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