
n., pl., eulachon, or -chons.
See candlefish.
[Chinook Jargon vlâkân.]
| Dictionary: eu·la·chon |
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| Animal Encyclopedia: Eulachon |
Thaleichthys pacificus
FAMILY
Osmeridae
TAXONOMY
Salmo (Mallotus?) pacificus Richardson, 1836, Columbia River, no higher than Katpootl, northwestern United States.
OTHER COMMON NAMES
English: Candlefish, oilfish, fathom fish, hooligan; French: Eulachon.
PHYSICAL CHARACTERISTICS
Total length 11.8 in (30 cm), small, slender bodied; dorsal fin medially placed; adipose fin present. Body covered in small scales. Brown to blue dorsally, silver laterally, white ventrally. Raised ridge along middle of body; large tubercles on fins of breeding males are absent or small in females.
DISTRIBUTION
Northwest Pacific between 61° and 36°N. From west of Saint Matthew Island and Kuskokwim (Bering Sea) in the north to Monterey Bay in northern California in the south.
HABITAT
Marine, brackish, and fresh waters. Anadromous, found in coastal seas, estuaries, rivers, and streams to a depth of 2,050 ft (625 m). Landlocked forms exist.
BEHAVIOR
Little is known.
FEEDING ECOLOGY AND DIET
All stages feed on zooplankton and small benthic crustaceans such as mysid and euphausiid shrimps, as well as copepods and amphipods. Adults do not feed in freshwater. Reported to be preyed upon by dogfishes, salmonids, cods, flatfishes, sturgeons, seagulls, seals, and porpoises.
REPRODUCTIVE BIOLOGY
Sexual maturity is attained at end of third year. Spawning migrations from the sea to rivers occur when river temperatures rise above 40°F (4.4°C), spawns in spring after the ice melt. Sticky eggs with a short stalk are broadcast over sand or gravel. Larvae hatch after about 30 days and are swept downstream and out to sea. Most adults die following spawning, a few survive for five years. Adults may return to natal streams to spawn.
CONSERVATION STATUS
Not listed by the IUCN.
SIGNIFICANCE TO HUMANS
Traditionally an important fishery for Native Americans for food and oil. Fish are so oily they were dried and used as candles. Used as food for minks and other animals farmed for fur.
| Wikipedia: Eulachon |
| Eulachon | |
|---|---|
| Scientific classification | |
| Kingdom: | Animalia |
| Phylum: | Chordata |
| Class: | Actinopterygii |
| Order: | Osmeriformes |
| Family: | Osmeridae |
| Genus: | Thaleichthys |
| Species: | T. pacificus |
| Binomial name | |
| Thaleichthys pacificus Richardson, 1836 |
|
The eulachon, also hooligan, ooligan, or candlefish, is a small anadromous ocean fish, Thaleichthys pacificus, a smelt found along the Pacific coast of North America from northern California to Alaska.
The common names of this fish have a somewhat confusing relationship. The name "candlefish" derives from the fact that it is so fat during spawning, with up to 15% of total body weight in fat, that if caught, dried, and strung on a wick, it can be burned as a candle. This is the name most often used by early explorers. The name "eulachon" (occ. "oolichan", "oulachon", "uthlecan", etc.) is from the Chinookan language and the Chinook jargon based on that language. The name "hooligan" appears to have been derived from "eulachon" by similarity with the English slang term for a ruffian or scoundrel which gained currency in the late 19th century.
The unrelated sablefish Anoplopoma fimbria is also called "candlefish" in the United Kingdom.
Contents |
Eulachon are distinguished by the large canine teeth on the vomer bone and 18 to 23 rays in the anal fin. Like Pacific salmon they have an "adipose fin"; it is sickle-shaped. The paired fins are longer in males than in females. All fins have well-developed breeding tubercles (raised tissue "bumps") in ripe males, but these are poorly developed or absent in females. Adult coloration is brown to blue on the back and top of the head, lighter to silvery white on the sides, and white on the ventral surface; speckling is fine, sparse, and restricted to the back. They feed on plankton but only while at sea.
Eulachon feed primarily on plankton as well as fish eggs, insect larvae, and small crustaceans. It forms an important part of the diet of many ocean and shore predators, and serves as a prominent food source for people living near its spawning streams.
Eulachon, as anadromous fish, spend most of their adult lives in the ocean but return to their natal freshwater streams and rivers to spawn and die. As such, one stream may see regular large runs of eulachon while a neighboring stream sees few or none at all. Regular annual runs are common but not entirely predictable, and occasionally a river which has large runs sees a year with no returns; the reasons for such variability are not known. The eulachon run is characteristic for the early portion being almost entirely male, with females following about midway through the run to its conclusion. Males are easily distinguished from females during spawning by fleshy ridges which form along the length of their bodies.
Indigenous communities of the Pacific Coast from California to Alaska made eulachon an important part of their diet, as well as a valuable trade item with peoples whose territories did not include spawning rivers. The species was caught using traps, rakes, and nets. The harvest continues today, with other residents taking part in the exploitation of the large runs. Today harvested eulachon are typically stored frozen and thawed as needed. They may also be dried, smoked, or canned. Eulachon were also processed for their rich oil. The usual process was to allow the fish to decompose for a week or more in a pit in the ground, then add boiling water and skim off the oil, which would rise to the surface. Eulachon oil (also known as "grease") was the most important product traded into the interior, so the trails over which the trade was conducted came to be known as "grease trails". Other uses of eulachon by non-Natives include bait for sportsfishing and food for cats and dogs.
On November 2008, the U.S. National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS) received a petition from the Cowlitz Indian Tribe to list a Distinct Population Segment (DPS) of eulachon from Washington, Oregon, and California, as an endangered or threatened species under the U.S. Endangered Species Act.[1] (ESA). NMFS found that this petition presented enough information to warrant conducting a status review of the species. Based on the status review NMFS proposed listing this species as threatened on March 13, 2009.[2] A final listing decision is due within a year.
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| smelt (fish) |
| The eulachon has what other name derived from a use the Chinook Indians made of it during its spawning season? Read answer... |
| What are some methods that aboriginal people used to obtain the oil from eulachons? | |
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