Trout roe is extracted by vigorously massaging it out of the fish, male or female.
It depends on the fish. Salmon roe usually requires the sacrifice of the salmon, since most salmon will die anyway after spawning. Sturgeon roe, from which we get caviar, requires the fish to be opened, more or less surgically. Depending on the fishery, those sturgeon may find their way into a fish market, or they may be stitched up and allowed to live on, producing more roe in the future.
A smelt is a fish, and roe is fish eggs, so smelt roe is smelt eggs.
a puree of fish roe may be called Pate.
no - roe is a packet of fish eggs carried within a female fish's body.
Fish eggs are called "roe" (the word is both singular and plural). As a food, the roe of certain fish (most famously, the sturgeon) is also called "caviar."
Fish eggs
Roe is the term for the eggs of fish. Gender is not determined until the roe is developed.
Roe is the term for the eggs of fish. Gender is not determined until the roe is developed.
Shad is a type of fish. Roe is the eggs of a fish.
Roe, also known as fish eggs, does come from the internal organs. To be more specific roe comes from the internal ovaries. The most common form of fish eggs, or roe is caviar. Caviar is a roe of large fish often salted, then eaten. People call caviar "fish eggs" now a days.
Roe is fish eggs. ---- Roe is fish eggs, yes, but in this circumstance I believe "roes" is referring to roe deer. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roe_deer, as in a "herd of roes" "Roe" when referring to the eggs of a fish doubles as the singular and plural, like fish and deer and you get the point. "Waiter, bring me shad roe."
Soft roe.
In most fish the females is called 'hard roe' and the males is called 'soft roe' The roe of Sturgeon and Lump Fish is usually called 'caviar'.