News

Elvers are one of the most valuable fish in Canada – but 25 years since a Mi’kmaq man’s famous court case, there is little ...
In Taylor Slough alone, researchers found that populations of two native crayfish and the tiny flagfish dropped 99% since the eels invaded. Marsh killifish dropped 91% and the eastern mosquitofish ...
After being swallowed alive, Japanese eels were able to escape from a predator fish’s stomach and swim to freedom through the fish’s gills, new research shows.
‘New York’ Magazine’s restaurant critic Matthew Schneier reviews Eel Bar on the Lower East Sdie, which, seven months after opening, has become a less buzzy, better version of itself.
Cobia are drawing the attention of most anglers fishing from the Chesapeake Bay Bridge-Tunnel up the entire bayside of the Eastern Shore.
EASTHAMPTON — Several mysteries surround American eels, a species that spends a portion of its life in Massachusetts. For example, no one has ever observed the species spawn, and only one has ...
Thirteen eels managed to get their tails out of the fish’s gills and nine effected a successful escape. It took these eels an average of just under a minute to escape, the study noted.
Harmless in the lab, but they’re a devastating force in the eastern part of Everglades National Park. The Asian swamp eels are living in the same areas most visitors see, such as Anhinga Trail ...
WRITER'S JOURNAL People ask me why I wrote a book about eels. I tell a series of lies about it. The truth for writers of nonfiction is that often our topics find us ...
Imagine you're a Japanese eel, swimming around just minding your own business when—bam! A predatory fish swallows you whole and you only have a few minutes to make your escape before certain death.
In Pennsylvania, the largest populations of American eels are found in the Delaware River watershed in the eastern part of the state. However, Southwestern Pennsylvania is part of the eel’s ...
Once they’ve laid their eggs, European eel larvae ― which bob around like tiny transparent leaves ― ride the currents for thousands of miles until landing on the shores of Eastern Europe.