Common rudd

Common rudd



  • Scardinius is a class of beam finned angle in the Cyprinidae family ordinarily called rudds. Locally, the name "rudd" with no further qualifiers is likewise utilized for specific species, especially the normal rudd (S. erythrophthalmus).
  •  The rudd can be recognized from the fundamentally the same as bug by method for the rudd's upturned mouth, enabling the rudd to pick nourishment things, for example, amphibian bugs from the surface of the water with negligible unsettling influence. 

  • The Greek rudd (S. graecus) is a comparative fish, around 40 cm long. It happens just in the southern tip of the Greek terrain. 
  • It lives in lakes and moderate streaming waterways, shaping substantial schools. It brings forth around April– June among submerged plants in shallow water. 
  • It encourages on little shellfish, the hatchlings and pupae of creepy crawlies, and on plant material.
  •  The dominant part of its nourishment is taken at or close to the surface of the water. The fish isn't typically found in profound water. 
  • Next to no is thought about the science of this species. It is vital locally, both to fishermen and business organizations.

No comments:

Powered by Blogger.