A freshwater food fish (Lota lota) of the Northern Hemisphere, related to and resembling the cod and having barbels on the nose and chin. Also called cusk, eelpout.
[Middle English, from Old French borbote, from borbeter, to move about in mud.]
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A freshwater food fish (Lota lota) of the Northern Hemisphere, related to and resembling the cod and having barbels on the nose and chin. Also called cusk, eelpout.
[Middle English, from Old French borbote, from borbeter, to move about in mud.]
Lota lota
FAMILY
Lotidae
TAXONOMY
Lota lota Linnaeus, 1758, Europe.
OTHER COMMON NAMES
English: American burbot (Canada), lush (Alaska), lawyer, ling (Canada), eelpout.
PHYSICAL CHARACTERISTICS
Short first dorsal fin followed by long second dorsal fin. Anal fin single, nearly as long-based as second dorsal. Pelvic fins normal, not modified into elongate rays. Well-developed chin barbel. Anterior nostril has barbel-like flap. Color yellow, light tan, to brown, overlain with a blotchy pattern of darker brown or black.
DISTRIBUTION
The burbot occurs in freshwaters of northern North America and Europe and Asia. Occurs farther north than 40° N (to nearly 80° N).
HABITAT
Occurs on the bottoms of lakes and rivers, from depths of 1.6 ft (0.5 m) to more than 755 ft (230 m).
BEHAVIOR
The burbot moves into shallower waters during summer nights. They also move into shallower water to spawn in some parts of their range.
FEEDING ECOLOGY AND DIET
The burbot has been characterized as a voracious predator and night feeder. Young fish feed on insect larvae, crayfish, molluscs and other invertebrates, whereas adults >19.7 in (50 cm) feed almost exclusively on other fishes.
REPRODUCTIVE BIOLOGY
Burbot spawning occurs from November to May, but primarily between January and March in Canada, and December in parts of Russia. Spawning usually occurs under the ice, over sand or gravel substrates, at night, and in shallow water (<9.8 ft [3 m] depth). Eggs are semi buoyant. Fecundity ranges from 45,600 eggs per 13.4-in (34-cm) female to 1,362,077 eggs in a 25.2-in (64-cm) female.
CONSERVATION STATUS
Not listed by the IUCN. The burbot may occur in considerable numbers in many inland lakes, but has declined over past levels in the Great Lakes, where it had been considered a nuisance species.
SIGNIFICANCE TO HUMANS
The burbot is an important competitor for food of other species, such as lake trout and whitefish. It is fished commercially in Finland, Sweden, and the European part of Russia, but it is only moderately important as a commercial species in Canada and Alaska. Often marketed salted or as pet food.
[BER-buht] This freshwater cod has a fairly lean, white flesh with a delicate flavor. It can be poached, baked, broiled or sautéed. See also fish.
For more information on burbot, visit Britannica.com.
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The burbot (Lota lota), often referred to as a "junkfish", is a freshwater fish related to the cods. It is also known as the lawyer, and eelpout, and closely related to the ling and the cusk. It is most common in streams and lakes of North America and Europe above 40°N latitude. They are fairly common in Lake Erie but are also found in the other Great Lakes
In Britain, the burbot is possibly an extinct fish as it is believed that there have been no documented catches of the species since the 1970s [1]. If the burbot does still survive in the UK, the counties of Cambridgeshire and Yorkshire (particularly the River Derwent or River Ouse) seem to be the strongest candidates for areas in which the species might yet continue to survive [2]. There have been plans to re-introduce this freshwater member of the cod family back into British waters but these have yet to come to fruition.
In the 1920s, Minnesota druggist Theodore H. Rowell and his father Joseph Rowell, a commercial fisherman on Lake of the Woods, were using the burbot as feed for the foxes on Joe’s blue fox farm. They discovered that the burbot contained something that improved the quality of the fox’s furs; this was confirmed by the fur buyers who commented that these furs were superior to other furs they were seeing. Ted felt it was something in the burbot, so he extracted some oil and sent it away to be assayed. The result of the assay was that the liver of the burbot is 3-4 times more potent in vitamin D, and 4 – 10 times more potent in vitamin A than “good grades” of cod liver oil. The vitamin content varies in Burbot from lake to lake, where their diet may have some variation. Additionally, the burbot liver makes up approximately 10% of the fish's total body weight, and their liver is 6x larger than freshwater fish of comparable size. Ted also found in his research that the oil is lower in viscosity, and more rapidly digested and assimilated than most other fish liver oils. Ted went on to found the Burbot Liver Products Company which later became Rowell Laboratories, Inc. of Baudette, Minnesota, and is today a subsidiary of Solvay Pharmaceuticals of Brussels Belgium.
The town of Walker, Minnesota holds an International Eelpout Festival every winter on Leech Lake. In Finland, its roe is sold as caviar. There is an annual spearfishing tournament held near Dauphin, Manitoba, Canada. One of the highlights of the tournament is the fish-fry where the days catch is served up deep-fried.
The genus and species name "lota" comes from "la lotte," the old French word for "codfish." The Inuktitut word for burbot was used to name the extinct species Tiktaalik.
Common Name: Burbot Species Name: Lota Lota Type of Organism: Fish
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