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Jack mackerels are marine fish in the Trachurus genus of the Carangidae family.
Distinguishing the species from members of Decapterus and Trachurus is more difficult, requiring detailed anatomical analysis.
Trachurus japonicus (Japanese jack mackerel)
Trachurus symmetricus (Pacific jack mackerel)
Hybridization between the low-plated leiurus and completely plated trachurus cannot account for most of the polymorphism in North America.
Furthermore, vendors are known to fraudulently market C. rhonchus as 'horse mackerel', which is strictly applied to members of Trachurus.
Trachurus novaezelandiae (yellowtail horse mackerel)
Trachurus trecae (Cunene horse mackerel)
The family contains many important commercial and game fish, notably the Pacific jack mackerel and the other jack mackerels in the genus Trachurus.
The Pacific jack mackerel is classified within the genus Trachurus, commonly known as the horse mackerels or jack mackerels.
Trachurus trachurus (Atlantic horse mackerel)
Adult G. aculeatus (form trachurus) and G. wheatlandi collected at the mouth of the Rivière des Vases were used as the parental stock.
The Atlantic horse mackerel (Trachurus trachurus) is a species of jack mackerel in the family Carangidae.
It is commonly applied to pelagic fishes, especially of the Carangidae (jack mackerels and scads) family, most commonly those of the genera Trachurus or Caranx.
The other New Zealand mackerel Trachurus novaezelandiae which is indistinguishable from the jack mackerel unless examined closely, has been reported from south-east Asia and Japan as well.
The genus Trachurus was defined in 1810 by Constantine Samuel Rafinesque-Schmaltz, who called the type species Trachurus saurus.
Some of these are the similar Trachurus species, and due to these also being present in the catch, Caranx rhonchus is often not differentiated, leading to lower than accurate catch statistics.
Mugil cephalus Mugilidae Eleutheronema tetradactylum Polynemidae Perciformes Pomatomus saltatrix Rachycentron canadum Rachycentridae Trachurus spp.
The yellowtail scad has a body profile quite similar to that of the other fish often called 'scad' from the genera Decapterus and Trachurus, having a moderately compressed, oval-shaped body.
(Myxozoa, Multivalvulida) from the oocytes of the Atlantic horse mackerel Trachurus trachurus (Perciformes, Carangidae) in Tunisian coasts.
The common name of 'false scad' refers to the scad like appearance of the fish, despite it not being a member of Decapterus or Trachurus, the two genera most commonly referred to as 'scads'.
During their period of reproductive activity, the sticklebacks Gasterosteus aculeatus (trachurus) and Gasterosteus wheatlandi show differences in their use of available microhabitats in the salt marshes of the St. Lawrence estuary.
While multivariate means were significantly different between trachurus and leiurus, there was even greater differentiation between the leiurus populations found in lakes, ponds, and streams, divergence which was independent of geographical distance between localities.
Here, we show how to estimate mortality rates for the individual egg stages of Atlantic mackerel (Scomber scombrus) and horse mackerel (Trachurus trachurus) from triennial surveys conducted since 1977.
Threespine sticklebacks (Gasterosteus aculeatus L., form trachurus) with overripe, ovulated eggs have a hard 'berried' abdomen, easily distinguishable from the soft, smoothly distended abdomen of fish with normal ovulated eggs.