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      • Under 1 cm (0.39 in), burbot eat copepods and cladocerans, and above 1–2 cm (0.39–0.79 in), zooplankton and amphipods. As adults, they are primarily piscivores, preying on lamprey, whitefish, grayling, young northern pike, suckers, stickleback, trout, and perch.
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  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › BurbotBurbot - Wikipedia

    Under 1 cm (0.39 in), burbot eat copepods and cladocerans, and above 1–2 cm (0.39–0.79 in), zooplankton and amphipods. As adults, they are primarily piscivores, preying on lamprey, whitefish, grayling, young northern pike, suckers, stickleback, trout, and perch. [11]

  3. Under 1 cm (0.39 in), burbot eat copepods and cladocerans, and above 1–2 cm (0.39–0.79 in), zooplankton and amphipods. As adults, they are primarily piscivores, preying on lamprey, whitefish, grayling, young northern pike, suckers, stickleback, trout, and perch.

  4. Sep 20, 2023 · Their diet includes fish, insects, and small crustaceans. They serve as essential predators in their ecosystems, and like many other large predatory species, such as the largemouth bass ( Micropterus salmoides ), often catch them as sportfish. BURBOT FACT SHEET. COMMON NAMES. Eelpout, cusk, lawyer, lingcod, mud shark, Tiktaalik. SCIENTIFIC NAME.

  5. Fish of the Week! Burbot Transcript 1/11/21 . For as much as I love burbot, having all these common names does kind of frustrate me a little bit. Not that it has a lot of common names that it goes by but that actually a lot of the common names that it goes by are preferred common names for other species of fish. So it does make it hard when you ...

  6. They eat mostly other fish such as small yellow perch and walleyes, but also consume fish eggs, clams, crayfish, mayfly larvae and other aquatic insects. Reproduction The spawning season for this unique fish is very unusual.

  7. Burbot, elongated fish of the family Lotidae that inhabits cold rivers and lakes of Europe, Asia, and North America. A bottom dweller found in both fresh and brackish waters, it descends as deep as 700 metres (about 2,300 feet). It is a mottled greenish or brown fish and may grow as long as 1.5 metres (about 4.9 feet).

  8. Burbot feed at night and, in Alaska, eat other fish that live where they live— Longnose Suckers, whitefishes, lampreys, sculpins, and even occasionally other burbot. They’re a well-adapted bottom predator that prefers lakes or slow moving waters…and fresh bait.

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