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- 17 (xsd:integer)
- Atlantic herring, Clupea harengus (en)
- 7889400.0 (dbd:second)
- Spinner shark spin on their axis, snapping herrings as they go (en)
- Freshly hatched larva in a drop of water beside a match to demonstrate how tiny it is: The black eyes and the yolk are visible. (en)
- Blue herrings, Engels Kozlov 1965 (en)
- Dolphins can hunt herring in groups (en)
- Global commercial capture of herrings (en)
- Green = Clupea herrings (en)
- Herring monger, c. 1500 (en)
- Medieval herring fishing in Scania, 1555 (en)
- Norse herring boat (en)
- Processing river herrings (en)
- Sailfish herd herring schools with their sails (en)
- Swordfish slash at herrings with their swords (en)
- The Dutch herring fleet, c. 1700 (en)
- The herring buss 1789 (en)
- Thresher shark strike them with their tails (en)
- Press for extracting oil from herrings in the historic village (en)
- in million tonnes reported by the FAO 1950–2010 (en)
- Barrels for storing salted herring, c. 1465 at the archaeological site of Walraversijde, Belgium (en)
- Still Life with smoked herrings on yellow paper, Van Gogh 1889 (en)
- Japanese Pacific herring fisherman's house in the historic village of Hokkaidō, Sapporo (en)
- Reaper, typical of the herring boats that used to operate in Scotland during the early twentieth century (en)
- Still life with herring and stoneware jug, Georg Flegel, c. 1600 (en)
- Still life with a glass of beer and smoked herring on a plate, Pieter Claesz 1636 (en)
- Transparent eggs with the yolk and eyes visible and one larva hatched (en)
- Animation showing how herrings hunt in a synchronised way to capture an alert and evasive copepod (en)
- School of herrings ram feeding on a school of copepods with opercula and mouth expanded: The fish swim in a grid with a distance of the jump length of their prey, as indicated by the animation at the right. (en)
- ↑ All herrings 2010 (en)
- ↑ Clupea herrings, 1950–2010 (en)
- ↑ Other herrings, 1950–2010 (en)
- Young larva in typical oblique swimming position, with remaining yolk still attached: Another larva at the upper right is in the classical S-shape of the beginning phase of attacking a copepod. (en)
- The last surviving steam drifter of the Great Yarmouth herring fleet, Norfolk. Drifters were designed to catch herrings in a long drift net. (en)
- This copepod has its antennae spread. The antennae detect the pressure wave of an approaching fish. (en)
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