Mases fish that live in the Atlantic ocean
The body is elongated and covered with small scales, the first dorsal fin is shorter than the second, her only anal fin is elongated and notched and has a black line along its body. The back is black, gray or brown and belly is white or silver. Can reach up to 1.5 meters long and weights 15 kg live near the seabed on the continental shelf and the cliff, at varying depths between 30 and 500 meters deep, and even more. During the summer months, young specimens are close to the coast and in winter down to greater depths.
During the day they remain near the bottom and rises at night to catch food. His diet is based on plankton, encephalopathy, crustaceans and smaller fish. Have even the use of smaller copies of the same species because this species is reported to habits of cannibalism. Reproduction takes place between late winter and spring. Some hake live on both sides of the Atlantic Ocean and are characterized by filamentous pelvic fins, which are out of the throat and dragged through the water. Red hake is the American common species and is about 60 cm in length. This fish and white hake are prized for their oil and their swim bladders, which are used in the manufacture of gelatin called isinglass or fish glue.
The true hakes living on both sides of the Atlantic, the Mediterranean and the Pacific, off the coast of the United States, Mexico, Chile and New Zeal land. The common European hake is slender; reaching 1.2 m long, with long, pointed snout and their meat is delicious. Silver hake lives between Cape Cod, Massachusetts (USA) and Cape Sable, Nova Scotland, Canada. One species of Pacific fisheries, both in its larval form, as in their adult form, on the coast of Baja California (Mexico) and California (USA). Another species of great economic importance is that intense catch in Chile, where it caught flame.
Of the Gran Sol fishery south of Ireland, whose name has nothing to do with the sun king, but it is the phonetic transcription of the French ‘Grand Sole’, meaning ‘big language’. Gran Sol hake, mainly discharged at auction Boreal La Coruna and is what might be called hake ‘chilled’, as it travels surrounded by ice.
Certainly the EU policy on hake, its restrictive quotas, do that, but let them know you like me so stunned when I heard about eighty percent of the catch returned to the sea … dead. It’s called ‘discard’ board, which is imposed for economic reasons or, as we say, of legislation.

