#1 Comment By Mugil On November 26, 2008 @ 1: 43 am. From Wordnik.com. [Want to See Task One of the Sticky Business Contest?] Reference
The mullet (‘Mugil Africanus’) is the most abundant. From Wordnik.com. [Missionary Travels and Researches in South Africa] Reference
The region is particularly rich in certain taxons: fish of the genus Mugil as well as post-larva shrimp of the family Penaeidae. From Wordnik.com. [Manabí mangroves] Reference
The principal fish dependent on this teeming life are eel Anguilla anguilla, mullets Mugil cephalus and M. ramada, sole Solea solea, sea bass Dicentrarchus labrax, barbel Barbus barbus, shad Alosa fallax and anchovy Engraulis encrasicholus. From Wordnik.com. [Ichkeul National Park, Tunisia] Reference
The mosala (‘Clarias Capensis’ and ‘Glanis siluris’), the mullet (‘Mugil Africanus’), and other fishes, spread over the Barotse valley in such numbers that when the waters retire all the people are employed in cutting them up and drying them in the sun. From Wordnik.com. [Missionary Travels and Researches in South Africa] Reference
Many commercial fishes, which sustain subsistence and artisan fisheries, are associated to Venezuelan mangroves, including catfishes (Arius herzbergii, Cathorops spixii); snooks (Centropomus undecimalis, C. ensiferus); mullets (Mugil curema, M. liza); and mojarras (Diapterus plumieri, D. rhombeus, Gerres cinereus). From Wordnik.com. [Coastal Venezuelan mangroves] Reference
These fish include cyprinids of the genus Barbus and Mirogrex, cichlids of the genus Sarotherodon, and Mugil cephalus of the family Mugilidae. From Wordnik.com. [xml's Blinklist.com] Reference
Ecología trófica de Mugil curema, Mugil incilis y Mugil liza (Pisces: Mugilidae) en la Ciénaga Grande de Santa Marta, Caribe colombiano: Análisis Bioquímico. From Wordnik.com. [Magdalena-Santa Marta mangroves] Reference
Makli (red mullets, Mugil cephalus), and the Búri, were monstrous animals, with big eyes and long beaks like woodcocks; some of these were garnished with rows of ridiculously big teeth. From Wordnik.com. [The Land of Midian — Volume 1] Reference
A large number of dead Mugil fish, which locals call ‘Bonta†™, was found floating in the waters. “It must be a highly concentrated poisonous chemical because of which the fish might have perished, †a senior scientist said. From Wordnik.com. [The Times of India] Reference
Mugil cephalus and Solea vulgaris. From Wordnik.com. [Nile Delta flooded savanna] Reference
@ Mugil. From Wordnik.com. [Want to See Task One of the Sticky Business Contest?] Reference
@Mugil and @Andy. From Wordnik.com. [Want to See Task One of the Sticky Business Contest?] Reference
@ Mugil and Andy – Because neither of you seem to know me very well, allow me to clearly say that I am the first person to stand up and say, “What?!?. From Wordnik.com. [Want to See Task One of the Sticky Business Contest?] Reference
The echinidae of various species, large-spined and small-spined, the latter white as well as dull-red, were preserved in spirits. 104 Amongst the excellent fish, the Marján (a Sciœna) the Sultan el-Bahr, the Palamita (Scomber), the Makli (red mullets, Mugil cephalus), and the Búri, were monstrous animals, with big eyes and long beaks like woodcocks; some of these were garnished with rows of ridiculously big teeth. From Wordnik.com. [The Land of Midian] Reference
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