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Both taxa are also known by the common name vendace.
They live to be four to five years old, and spawn in the spring, unlike the vendace.
It is also popular among anglers, being noted for its trout and vendace.
Unfortunately the Bassenthwaite vendace are now thought to be extinct.
The chains chinked softly as they fell from Vendace's body.
You saw what happened to Borumm and Vendace today; they were once officers too.
Also present was the vendace, until it was declared extinct within the lake in 2001.
Vendace have been moved to higher lakes on a number of occasions to preserve the species, notably in 2005 and 2011.
Vendace narrowed his eyes against the driving wind.
It took more time than Vendace liked for the last vermin to - get down off the hill onto the shore.
Stocking with fish has resulted in the introduction of Atlantic salmon, vendace and lake trout.
Vendace gritted his teeth as the file scraped his neck.
Vendace curled his lip at the vermin in a scornful sneer.
Whitefish and vendace are the most common species of fish, the latter being an introduced species.
A more expensive alternative sold in Sweden and Finland is caviar from the vendace.
Many fish species are transitory, of which commercial value have smelt, vendace and partly salmon.
Vendace shrugged as he tended the roasting quail.
You two will take the places of Borumm and Vendace, with twoscore each to command.
There were vendace in the Lochmaben Lochs until as recently as 1963.
It is believed to have recently evolved from the sympatric vendace, Coregonus albula.
I already knew of Borumm and Vendace.
The Vickers Vendace was a 1920s British trainer aircraft.
Slipping away he found Borumm and Vendace waiting at the place he had arranged to meet them.
They kicked briefly when the chains of Borumm and Vendace tightened about their necks.
The vendace has been under serious threat of extinction in Britain and conservation bodies have been making considerable efforts to save the species.
It is believed to have recently evolved from the sympatric vendace, Coregonus albula.
Coregonus albula, widespread in northern continental Europe
European cisco (=vendace) - Coregonus albula
Coregonus albula remains absent.
Coregonus albula (vendace)
In Lake Stechlin, this species and the vendace (Coregonus albula) make up 95 percent of the fish biomass.
Coregonus albula, known as the vendace or as the European cisco, is a species of freshwater whitefish in the family Salmonidae.
The second most common fish is the vendace (Coregonus albula), also most prominently in Dalbosjön, with 200-300 fish per hectare.
The vendace (Coregonus albula L.) and the smelt (Osmerus eperlanusL.)
Coregonus vandesius, in lakes of Scotland and England; arguably the same species as Coregonus albula
It is a spring-spawning type of cisco, which probably has evolved from sympatric vendace (Coregonus albula) independently in a number of Swedish lakes.
In the inland waters of northern Europe, the European cisco or vendace (Coregonus albula) replaces the Siberian sardine cisco.
Most authorities now consider Coregonus vandesius to be a subjective synonym of Coregonus albula, which is a more widespread North European freshwater whitefish species.
By Swedish authorities it is treated as a morphotype Coregonus albula morphotype trybomi, and listed as "Data Deficient" in conservation evaluation for the present.
Coregonus sardinella is very closely related to the European cisco or vendace Coregonus albula, and also close to the Siberian peled whitefish C. peled.
Traditionally, the fish used in kalakukko is either the Coregonus albula (Finnish 'muikku'), or European perch (Finnish 'Ahven'), but salmon is also sometimes used.
Kalix Löjrom is designation of the roe of the small salmonid fish species vendace (Coregonus albula), harvested specifically from the Bothnian Bay archipelago of the Baltic Sea in northern Sweden.
Other fish species still found are: Perca fluviatilis, Esox lucius, Rutilus rutilus, Coregonus albula, C. mulesum, C. lavaretus, Lota lota, Abramis brama, Stizostedion lucioperca and Salmo trutta lacustris.