释义 |
Definition of fingerling in English: fingerlingnoun ˈfɪŋɡəlɪŋˈfɪŋɡərlɪŋ 1A salmon parr. Example sentencesExamples - Today, most private live haulers and fingerling producers use liquid oxygen on their transport trucks, and many farmers use it on their farm trucks when moving fish from pond to pond.
- Kentucky State University recently joined the pilot project, adding 10,000 fingerling, or finger-size trout, to the fish already at the community college.
- Mitchell says several farms have lost entire ponds of fry (baby catfish) and fingerlings because of severe infections.
- The project aims to provide tilapia and catfish fingerlings to prospective fish farmers.
- Producers from Nebraska, Tennessee and North Carolina are part of the trend to send fingerlings to Wisconsin and Michigan for fattening.
- Since black crappie are omnivorous, they eat the fingerlings of many other fish, including those of its predators: pike, walleye, muskellunge, etc.
- Every year, the Iranians release up to 30 million fingerlings - baby fish - into the Caspian for restocking.
- Farmers harvest the full-grown fish and restock the ponds with more fingerlings, meaning that several different ages of catfish are present in a pond at any one time.
- The recently opened centre at Omahenene will supply fingerlings (baby fish) to the fish farmers in the regions of Omusati, Oshana, Kunene, and Ohangwena.
- The majority of the brown trout had been stocked as fingerlings as the reservoir filled in the early seventies.
- The least expensive size of fish for stocking is fingerlings, which are one to three inches long.
- The centre will supply fingerlings (baby fish) to the regions of Omusati, Oshana, Kunene and Ohangwena.
- These migratory diving birds winter in the Delta region, where they voraciously feed on channel catfish fingerlings and any other fish they can swallow.
- Another project is to find out why double-crested cormorants tend to pluck catfish fingerlings out of some ponds but not others.
- In this 30-week study, researchers stocked 9 ponds at a per-acre rate of 2,000 large fish and 6,000 fingerlings.
- Some forage fish will be sexually mature the first season after stocking as fingerlings.
- If more fingerlings were available - especially year-round - they could increase production of market-size fish and stabilize seasonal price fluctuations.
- However while finnock are usually thought to be small immature fingerling fish of a pound or less, the size of some of these sea roving fish will both surprise and delight you.
- Because higher levels of blue-green algae correlate with higher levels of off-flavors, Zimba and the other researchers say that older ponds may be used for holding sac fry and fingerlings.
- Larger zooplankton will be freeze-dried for enriching diets as the fry grow into large fingerlings ready to be moved into production tanks.
2US A variety of potato having a pink, yellow, blue, or light tan skin and flesh.
Origin Late Middle English (in the sense ‘finger of a glove’): from finger + -ling. Definition of fingerling in US English: fingerlingnounˈfɪŋɡərlɪŋˈfiNGɡərliNG 1A salmon parr. Example sentencesExamples - However while finnock are usually thought to be small immature fingerling fish of a pound or less, the size of some of these sea roving fish will both surprise and delight you.
- If more fingerlings were available - especially year-round - they could increase production of market-size fish and stabilize seasonal price fluctuations.
- The majority of the brown trout had been stocked as fingerlings as the reservoir filled in the early seventies.
- Producers from Nebraska, Tennessee and North Carolina are part of the trend to send fingerlings to Wisconsin and Michigan for fattening.
- Since black crappie are omnivorous, they eat the fingerlings of many other fish, including those of its predators: pike, walleye, muskellunge, etc.
- These migratory diving birds winter in the Delta region, where they voraciously feed on channel catfish fingerlings and any other fish they can swallow.
- Because higher levels of blue-green algae correlate with higher levels of off-flavors, Zimba and the other researchers say that older ponds may be used for holding sac fry and fingerlings.
- Kentucky State University recently joined the pilot project, adding 10,000 fingerling, or finger-size trout, to the fish already at the community college.
- The least expensive size of fish for stocking is fingerlings, which are one to three inches long.
- Some forage fish will be sexually mature the first season after stocking as fingerlings.
- The recently opened centre at Omahenene will supply fingerlings (baby fish) to the fish farmers in the regions of Omusati, Oshana, Kunene, and Ohangwena.
- Every year, the Iranians release up to 30 million fingerlings - baby fish - into the Caspian for restocking.
- Today, most private live haulers and fingerling producers use liquid oxygen on their transport trucks, and many farmers use it on their farm trucks when moving fish from pond to pond.
- The project aims to provide tilapia and catfish fingerlings to prospective fish farmers.
- The centre will supply fingerlings (baby fish) to the regions of Omusati, Oshana, Kunene and Ohangwena.
- In this 30-week study, researchers stocked 9 ponds at a per-acre rate of 2,000 large fish and 6,000 fingerlings.
- Farmers harvest the full-grown fish and restock the ponds with more fingerlings, meaning that several different ages of catfish are present in a pond at any one time.
- Larger zooplankton will be freeze-dried for enriching diets as the fry grow into large fingerlings ready to be moved into production tanks.
- Another project is to find out why double-crested cormorants tend to pluck catfish fingerlings out of some ponds but not others.
- Mitchell says several farms have lost entire ponds of fry (baby catfish) and fingerlings because of severe infections.
2US A variety of potato having a pink, yellow, blue, or light tan skin and flesh.
Origin Late Middle English (in the sense ‘finger of a glove’): from finger + -ling. |