No, fish must have both scales and fins.
Jews eat 'Kosher' food. This is a foodstuff , where the animal does not scavenge for its own food. 'Lambs' do NOT scavenge, but eat grass. 'Eel' do scavenge for their food, by eating detritus from the bootom of the water. So Jews will eat Lamb , but not Eel.
While eels do have scales from a scientific point of view, the word kashkeshet (קשקשת) is interpreted in the Talmud to be a subset of scales that can be cleanly removed from the skin of the fish. There are several types of scientifically-accepted scales which do not have this attribute, such as the denticles of a shark and the thin scales of an eel. It is for this reason that eel is not kosher.
Egg then leptoceplalus then glass eel then elvers yellow eel then silver eel then spawning . and that is for fresh water eel.?
Egg then leptoceplalus then glass eel then elvers yellow eel then silver eel then spawning . and that is for fresh water eel.?
It is a catfish and carp. It is not an eel.
Kingklip seems to be a kind of eel, and traditionally, eels are not considered kosher. To be kosher, a fish must have fins and scales, and the scales of most eels do not quite meet the traditioinal Jewish definition of a scale because they are embedded in the skin instead of loose where they can be scraped from the skin. However, there are Orthodox Jews who argue that it should be kosher because its scales appear to be just over the line into acceptability. In sum, it's a borderline case, and the traditional Jewish approach to such borderline cases is to "just say no."
Fish + Lightning = Eel
conger eel!!
no
An eel is a fish.
A freshwater eel is a type of eel. An eel is a long thin fish. The freshwater eel lives in rivers and lakes for most of its life and spawns (or has its young) in the sea
No. The gulper eel is a non-electric producing eel.