Pellona harroweri explained
Pellona harroweri, called the American coastal pellona and the caille, is a species of longfin herring native to the beaches and estuaries of the western Atlantic from Panama to southern Brazil. Some individuals can reach 18 cm, with the average closer to 12 cm. They school in very shallow waters, and are rarely found deeper than 16 m.
The species is considered a forage fish, used for bait for commercial fish and consumed by humans on a subsistence level.[1] They are eaten by the Costero dolphin, and by the La Plata dolphin.[2] [3]
Notes and References
- Web site: Forage Species . Fisheries Global Information System . . 28 December 2010.
- Borobia . Mônica . Barros . Nélio B. . 1989 . Notes on the diet of marine Sotalia fluviatilis . Marine Mammal Science . 5 . 4 . 395–399 . Wiley . 10.1111/j.1748-7692.1989.tb00353.x.
- Di Beneditto . Ana Paula Madeira . Ramos . Renata Maria Arruda . 2001 . Biology and conservation of the franciscana (Pontoporia blainvillei) in the north of Rio de Janeiro State, Brazil . Journal of Cetacean Research and Management . 3 . 2 . 185–192 . International Whaling Commission . 29 December 2010.