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Japanese sandfish

The Japanese sandfish (Arctoscopus japonicus), also known as the sailfin sandfish , is a species of fish of the Percomorpha (perch-like) clade in the order Trachiniformes, being one of the two genera in the family Trichodontidae, the sandfishes. Known in Japan as hatahata (ハタハタ, 鰰, 鱩, 燭魚), it is a commercially important fish especially for Akita and Yamagata prefectures.[4] Its habitat occurs in sandy-mud bottoms ranging from the Sea of Japan to the Okhotsk Sea.[1]

Japanese sandfish
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Actinopterygii
Order: Scorpaeniformes
Family: Trichodontidae
Genus: Arctoscopus
Jordan and Evermann, 1896[3]
Species:
A. japonicus
Binomial name
Arctoscopus japonicus
Synonyms[1]
  • Trichodon japonicus Steindachner, 1881

As a food source, the fish has mostly been sourced locally from the coastal region of the Sea of Japan, and has been designated the official prefectural fish of Akita Prefecture.[5] The fish, which is scaleless, may be prepared whole as braised or grilled fish, and has a mucilaginous consistency.[6] It is also dried to make stockfish; salted, dried, and made into himono; and cured in miso as misozuke. It is the main ingredient of the fish sauce called shottsuru.[7] The egg masses are known as burikko.[7] In Korean the fish is called 도루묵 dorumuk.[1]

The fish had also been used dried or in fish meal form as fertilizer, and shipped to agricultural areas at one time, into the 20th century.

Life cycle and behavior edit

The Japanese sandfish has a life span of 5 years,[5] attaining a typical fork length of 20 centimetres (7.9 in).[8] It is a deep sea fish that usually inhabits sandy and muddy sea floors in waters 200 to 400 metres (660 to 1,310 ft) (550 metres (1,800 ft)[9]) deep, but migrates from November to January to spawn in shallow rocky beds of seaweed.[8] The males reach sexual maturity at 1+12 years of age and beyond, and females at the 2-year-old stage; the individuals do not die after single spawning, and have several breeding cycles during their life span.[5][10][11]

It preys and feeds on amphipods, copepods, mysidacea, krill, squid, and fish.[5][12]

Distribution edit

The Japanese sandfish is distributed in the northwestern Pacific Ocean, particularly the Sea of Japan to the Okhotsk Sea, Kurile Islands and Kamchatka Peninsula.[13]

Three broad regional population groups had been postulated by Okiyama (1970) based on tagging,[14] and later mitochondrial DNA analysis confirmed these grouping on a genetic basis.[15] The population groups are:[16][17]

  • Western Japan (WJ) – This is a group that migrate the coast of the Sea of Japan from Tottori to Akita Prefecture. It comprises the "northern Sea of Japan" and "western Sea of Japan" subgroups.[18][19] The spawning grounds of the group has been assumed to be off all along the coast, but bulk spawning grounds are absent around the Noto Peninsula and any further west/south,[citation needed] and in fact, it has been reported that the western Sea of Japan group's spawning grounds occur in the east coast of the Korean peninsula.[20]
  • South Hokkaido (SH) – This is a group with breeding grounds in the Pacific Ocean off Hokkaido. It consists of Ishikari Bay [ja], Uchiura Bay, Hidaka, Kushiro, and Nemuro subgroups.[21]
  • Eastern Korea (EK) – This group has breeding grounds in the eastern coast of the Korean Peninsula.

Catch production in the Tōhoku region (Northeastern Japan)'s Pacific coast (otherwise known as "Sanriku") is modest, and no regular spawning grounds have been confirmed.[17] Migration routes have not been charted, but their travel range is considered extensive, since individuals from the Hokkaido and Sea of Japan population groups have been captured in the Sanriku shore.[17]

External morphology edit

The Japanese sandfish is silvery underneath, and light brown above with dark brown streaks flecked with spots.[22] Tall body depth, though not as tall as the Pacific sandfish (Trichodon trichodon).[23] Head and trunk are scaleless.[24][25]

A large mouth, oblique and turned upwards, is lined with rows of fine teeth.[25] The gill-flap on the cheek (preopercle) each has five sharp spines.[22] It has a first dorsal and a second dorsal fin that are separated by a gap.[22] The pectoral fins are particularly large.[22] The fish lacks an air-bladder.[26] It is active nocturnally, and during the day time lies buried in the mud or sand on the sea bottom, with only the mouth and eyes (and the spine) visible.[22][27]

The egg mass (roe) is usually green, but may also have yellow, red, or brown coloration. Pigment components present in the eggs include bilin and carotenoids such as idoxanthin, crustaxanthin, and vitamin A2 aldehyde (3-dehydroretinal). The bilin and retinal produces the base green color, and the amount of relative idoxanthin content is the key determinant of the color variation. Study of its prey (such as the amphipods) or the fish's stomach contents reveal negligible traces of idoxanthin and crustaxanthin, which means the fish must be internally converting other carotenoid substances such as astaxanthin that are abundant in their food into idoxanthin and crustaxanthin, given that fish in general cannot build their own carotenoid wholly out of building block materials. Researchers hypothesize that the intake of astaxanthin influences the idoxanthin concentration in the body, which result in the egg color change.[28]

Classification edit

 
Wet specimens of Hatahata and Ezo hatahata at Oga Aquarium Gao

The Japanese sandfish was classified under the Perciformes (perch-likes) order, Trachinoidei suborder, and Trichodontidae (sandfishes) family. However, mitochondrial DNA analysis indicates that the Trichodontidae is classified within the suborder Cottoidei of the Scorpaeniformes order.[29]

Similar species edit

Nomenclature edit

The Japanese name hatahata may be written as 鰰, which consists of the fish radical 魚 combined with the character kami () "god". Shokusanjin (Ōta Nanpo) records the lore that it came to be written this way "because within its scales arises the pattern of Mount Fuji, and was celebrated as auspicious fish," though the actual species has no scales.[31]

An alternate Japanese name is kaminari-uwo (雷魚) "thunder fish", which derives from their spawning (and catching) season coinciding with the months when thunderstorms become frequent.[6][32][33] In fact, hatahata is an old onomatopoeia representing the sound of the thunderclap, whose use is attested in the 10th century Kagerō Nikki, and which is the root of the verb hatata-ku "to thunder."[6][34]

In the Akita dialect [ja], hatahata sounds like hadahada to non-natives, because the "ta" is locally pronounced in voiced unaspirated dakuon [ja], so that hadahada is sometimes listed as a local name for the fish.[35] In Akita, the fish sometimes bears the name "satake uo" after the Satake clan who were rules of the land around 1600. But the Satakes were originally rooted in Hitachi Province (present-day Ibaraki Prefecture), and legend has it that the fish followed the masters from the old country (Shokusanjin notes that the legend is given in the Akita Suginaoshi monogatari (秋田杉直物語)).[6][36][a] In Tottori Prefecture the fish is called shirohata or kitaha.[b][c]

Fishing practices edit

The species is caught by bottom trawling offshore and by set-netting [ja] and gillnetting the coastal spawning waters.[4] The fish stock down further south are caught by Danish seine fishing.[37]

In Akita Prefecture, each household used to buy them in bulk by the crates (5 or 10 crates at a time) when in season, and the surplus would be preserved as salted fish or as nukazuke to be consumed as a protein source over the winter.[7][38]

FAO Statistics record that in 1950, the annual catch was 10,000 tonnes (9,800 long tons; 11,000 short tons) accounted solely in Japan, by the beginning of the 1970s Korean fisheries were catching half as much or more in tonnage as the Japanese. The global peak catch occurred in 1971 with 56,700 tonnes (55,800 long tons; 62,500 short tons) total, but by the end of the decade in 1979 there was a sharp collapse in the fish stock resulting in an annual catch of only 11,546 tonnes (11,364 long tons; 12,727 short tons).[39][d]

In Akita Prefecture, peak catch volume reached 15,000 tonnes (15,000 long tons; 17,000 short tons) per year,[40] but overfishing, possibly with an interplay of water temperature "regime" shifts, led to persisting depletion of stock,[41] so that the fishermen of Akita Prefecture, led by its Fisheries Cooperative Association [ja] self-imposed a total moratorium on the catch from 1992 to 1995[5][42] In 1999, four participating prefectures formed a fisheries management organization to manage the fish stock, followed in 2003 by a formal Resource Recovery Plan (資源回復計画) for these prefectures.[5] In Korea, the catch was 25,000 tonnes (25,000 long tons; 28,000 short tons) per year in 1971, but suffered a similar decline to 4,000 tonnes (3,900 long tons; 4,400 short tons) by 2008, and that country has also instituted conservation measures.[8]

Tottori prefecture is another area with significant participation in catching this species. Whereas Akita targets egg-carrying adults approach the surface to spawn, Tottori fishing practices capture the deep water migrating populations by bottom trawling, so that the caught fish tends to be fattier, though they do not carry eggs. The catch season for Tottori spans from September to May.[43][44]

Fishing restrictions edit

  • In 1999 the Aomori, Akita, Yamagata, and Niigata prefectures instituted restrictions prohibiting capture of fish measuring less than 15 cm (5.9 in).[45]
  • Accidents and drownings involving sports fishermen going overboard[46] as well as poaching egg masses (scavenging eggs washed ashore also constitute poaching)[47] has prompted regulations and patrolling efforts by the Fisheries Cooperative Association [ja] and police.[47][48][49][50]
    • Foraging, possessing and engaging in sales of egg masses are prohibited (Aomori and Akita)
    • Fishing method restrictions (Aomori, Akita, Yamagata)

Uses edit

At one time, dried hatahata was one type of fish-based fertilizer (fish manure) being trafficked in Japan.[51][e]

Food ingredient edit

 
Dried himono or stockfish of hatahata

The fish lacks scale, has few small bones, and the spine separates easily from the flesh, so that they are usually poached or broiled whole, or just with the head off. If the fish is fresh, snapping the bone at the base of the tail beforehand, will make it easier for the spine to come off easily after broiling. Fresh hatahata can be served salted and broiled, or be poached in a pot flavored with soy sauce, sake kasu, and especially shottsuru. In Akita, the pot dish would be flavored with shottsuru, a fish sauce traditionally made by curing the fish in brine.[7]

Another preparation is the dengaku [ja] (slathered with sweet miso paste and broiled),[52] which is eaten not only in Akita but also in the Shōnai region [ja] around Sakata, Yamagata.[citation needed]

The fish is preserved in various ways, such as nukazuke (pickled in rice bran and salt),[7] himono (as dried fish),[53] as mirinboshi [ja], (mirin-based flavored dried fish).[54] It is also made into a preserved narezushi; in Akita the preserving medium consists of rice and koji (Aspergillus oryzae mold for brewing sake)[6][7] but in Tottori Prefecture the hatahata narezushi is known locally as shirohatazushi [ja] and uses okara (soy pulp).[55][56]

Fresh hatahata is suitable for mizuni [ja] or poaching or simmering in water (the dish in Yamagata is called yu-age[57]), and eaten with soy sauce. It can be made into hatahata-jiru (miso soup), but the miso should be dissolved in the broth before the fish is plunged, otherwise the fish falls apart.[citation needed]

In South Korea, the fish (known there as dorumuk (Korean: 도루묵)) is eaten in communities in Gangwon Province and elsewhere along the Sea of Japan. In Korea it is mainly an ingredient for jjigae hot pot dishes, but sometimes the roe-laden females are grilled and eaten.[58]

Shottsuru edit

 
shottsuru

Locally, a fish sauce called shottsuru is made from this fish. The sauce which literally means "salty juice",[7] is made by pickling and fermenting the salted fish, and straining out the debris. The fish sauce is used to flavor the shottsuru nabe, or pot dish that uses this flavoring to cook the hatahata with vegetable and other ingredients.[6][7] In the Akita dialect, the pot dish also sometimes called shottsuru kayaki, with "kayaki [ja]" being the local term for nabe or hot pot dish.[citation needed]

Roe edit

In the Akita dialect [ja], the roe of this species is called buriko.[52] The fish is caught during its spawning season, when many of the females are loaded with eggs 2–3 millimetres (0.079–0.118 in) in diameter. The eggs are surrounded by slimy mucous.[citation needed]

Fresh roe that is cooked will burst and make light popping sounds when eaten, but roe from the fish preserved in salt or miso turn rubbery and hard to chew, resulting in a more blunt sound that sounds like buri buri which resulted in its name.[f]

The Japanese folk ballad known as Akita Ondo mentions the "Oga buriko" in the lyrics, which is a reference to the roe clusters.[citation needed]

See also edit

Footnotes edit

Explanatory notes edit

  1. ^ Lowry explains the name stuck after the success of the Satake clan's success at exporting the fish as fertilizer.[6]
  2. ^ Lowry gives kihata[6] as do some Japanese source, but kitaha seems to be supported by the majority
  3. ^ Called shima aji in the vicinity of Nō, Niigata, though this is misleading that term refers to the white trevally in mainstream Japan. (漁村と島 (2004), p.81)
  4. ^ Akita Prefecture alone caught 15,000 tonnes (15,000 long tons; 17,000 short tons) per year at its peak.[40]
  5. ^ Statistics for quantities entering the Tokyo Market indicate over 15,000 hyō were shipped in 1903, but none during the other years from 1902 ~ 1911. Each hyō (straw bag) contained 8 ~ 4 shō. 東京商業会議所統計年報. 1924. pp. 34–35.
  6. ^ There are alternate etymologies for buriko. One theory is that the mucous covered eggs bind together and are hard to separate, leading to the name 不離子 (buriko, "unseparable children"). Another theory proposes that during the Edo period when collecting the eggs was prohibited, a forager evaded an official's interrogation saying they were the eggs of buri (yellowtail).[59]

Citations edit

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  2. ^ "Arctoscopus japonicus". Integrated Taxonomic Information System. Retrieved 25 September 2018.
  3. ^ Bailly N, ed. (2014). "Arctoscopus Jordan & Evermann, 1896". FishBase. World Register of Marine Species. Retrieved 20 June 2018.
  4. ^ a b Masuda, Hajime (1984). The Fishes of the Japanese Archipelago. Vol. 1. Tokai University Press. p. 221. ISBN 978-4486050544.
  5. ^ a b c d e f Makino, Mitsutaku (2011), Fisheries Management in Japan: Its institutional features and case studies, Springer, p. 178, ISBN 978-9400717770
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h Lowry, Dave (2010), The Connoisseur's Guide to Sushi, ReadHowYouWant.com, pp. 116–118, ISBN 978-1458764140
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h Homma, Gaku (1991). The Folk Art of Japanese Country Cooking: A Traditional Diet for Today's World. North Atlantic Books. p. 69. ISBN 978-1556430985.
  8. ^ a b c Kim, Chang Gil; Lee, Sung Il; Cha, Hyung Kee; Yang, Jae Hyeong; Son, Yong Soo (2011), "Enhancement of sandfish, Arctoscopus japonicus, by artificial reefs in the eastern waters of Korea", in Bortone, Stephen A.; Brandini, Frederico Pereira; Fabi, Gianna; Otake, Shinya (eds.), Artificial Reefs in Fisheries Management, CRC Press, pp. 111–124, ISBN 978-1439820087
  9. ^ Fedorov, V.V., I.A. Chereshnev, M.V. Nazarkin, A.V. Shestakov and V.V. Volobuev, 2003. Catalog of marine and freshwater fishes of the northern part of the Sea of Okhotsk. Vladivostok: Dalnauka, 2003. 204 p.
  10. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on October 29, 2013.
  11. ^ Tomoda, Tsutomu; Hotta, Kazuo; Morioka, Taizo (2006). "Growth, spawning and migration of hatchery-reared Japanese sandfish Arctoscopus japonicus released in Nanao Bay and Toyama Bay". Nippon Suisan Gakkaishi. 72 (6): 1039–1045. doi:10.2331/suisan.72.1039. abstract
  12. ^ Komoto, Ryota (甲本亮太); Kudo, Yuki (工藤裕紀); Takatsu, Tetsuya (髙津哲也) (2011), "Vertical distribution and feeding habits of Japanese sandfish (Arctoscopus japonicus) larvae and juveniles off Akita Prefecture in the Sea of Japan", 水産増殖 (Suisan Zōshoku), 59 (4): 615–630, hdl:2115/51002 abstract
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  14. ^ Okiyama, M. (沖山宗雄). "ハタハタの資源生物学的研究.II系統群(予報)". 日本海区水産研究所研究報告. 22: 59–69., cited by Shirai et al. 2006, p. 357
  15. ^ Finding in Shirai et al. 2006, summarized in Shirai, Goto & Hirose 2007, p. 47 (latter is in Japanese)
  16. ^ Shirai, Shigeru; Kuranaga, Ryoji; Sugiyama, Hideki; Higuchi, Masahito (2006). "Population structure of the sailfin sandfish, Arcto scopus japonicus (Trichodontidae), in the Sea of Japan". Ichthyological Research. 53 (4): 357–368. doi:10.1007/s10228-006-0356-0. S2CID 22867391.
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  23. ^ a b Shibata, Satoru (柴田理) (1993). "ハタハタとエゾハタハタの比較" (PDF). 日本海ブロック試験研究録. 29: 17–21.
  24. ^ Jordan, David Starr (1907). Fishes. Henry Holt. p. 578.
  25. ^ a b Chereshnev, I. A.; Nazarki, M. V. (2006). "On the occurrence of Japanese sandfish Arctoscopus japonicus (Trichodontidae) in the region of Tauisk Bay of the Sea of Okhotsk". Journal of Ichthyology. 42: 683–686.
  26. ^ Boulenger, G.A. (1901). "Classification of Teleostean Fishes". The Annals and Magazine of Natural History: Including Zoology, Botany, and Geology. 7. 8: 269.
  27. ^ Herald, Earl Stannard (1961). Living fishes of the world. Doubleday. p. 205.
  28. ^ Morioka, T.(森岡泰三); Hotta, K.(堀田和夫); Tomoda, T.(友田務); Nakamura, L (中村弘二) (2005). "ハタハタArctoscopus japonicusの卵塊が多色化する要因" [A possible factor influencing the color variation in Japanese sandfish Arctoscopus japonicus egg masses]. 日本水産学会誌 (Journal of the Japanese Society of Fisheries Science). 71 (2): 212–214. doi:10.2331/suisan.71.212.
  29. ^ 水産総合研究センター [in Japanese] (August 2001). "ハタハタのミトコンドリアDNA全塩基配列の決定と類縁関係の解明". 水産週報 (1553). Press release NDL data
  30. ^ Okiyama, M (1990). "Contrast in reproductive style between two species of sandfish (family Trichodontidae)". Fishery Bulletin. 88: 543–549.
  31. ^ 蜀山人『一話一言』巻十一大田, 南畝 (1907), 蜀山人全集, vol. 4, 吉川弘文館, p. 291「鱗の中に富士山のもやうを生じ候故、めでたき魚と祝し、文字はいつごろよりか魚篇に神と書なり、」
  32. ^ Nihon Dōbutsu Gakkai (1897), Annotationes Zoologicæ Japonenses, vol. 1, Tokyo, p. 108{{citation}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  33. ^ Ashburne, John; Abe, Yoshi (2002). Japan. Lonely Planet. p. 51. ISBN 9781740590105.
  34. ^ Mozume, Takayo (物集高世); Yokoi, Tokifuyu (横井時冬), eds. (1895), "支言考", Kōten Kōkyūjo kōen (皇典講究所講演), vol. 15, 皇典講究所, p. 12
  35. ^ 澁澤, 敬三 (1944), 日本魚名集覽 第二部, 生活社, p. 175
  36. ^ 大田 1907, vol.4, p.291
  37. ^ Watanabe et al. 2006, p. 221
  38. ^ 秋田市 (Japan), ed. (2003). 秋田市史. Vol. 16(民俗編). p. 300. (Akita City's published municipal history, governmental publication)
  39. ^ "FAO Capture Production of Arctoscopus japonicus (t) n = 2". FishBase. 2010. Retrieved 13 April 2014.
  40. ^ a b 竹内, 健 (1981), "ハタハタ", 秋田大百科事典 (encyclopedia), 秋田魁新報社, p. 660
  41. ^ Watanabe, Kyuji; Sakuramoto, Kazumi; Sugiyama, Hideki; Suzuki, Naoki (2005). "Collapse of the Arctoscopus japonicus catch in the Sea of Japan-environmental factors or overfishing-" (PDF). Global Environmental Research. 9 (2): 131–137.
  42. ^ The fishery closure years are graphed in fig. 4, Watanabe et al. 2005
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  46. ^ . Aomori Prefectural Police. Archived from the original on 2014-04-13. Retrieved 2012-03-23.
  47. ^ a b . Mutsu Shimpō 陸奥新報. 陸奥新報社. 2008-11-28. Archived from the original on 22 March 2010. Retrieved 2009-11-16.
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  52. ^ a b "めいぶつ秋田県". 日本語ジャーナル: 40. 2007-11-15.
  53. ^ "ハタハタの干物の市場規模を知りたい". 2011-04-20. Retrieved 13 April 2014. (FAQ published by Tottori Prefecture Library. Questioner sought market size of hatahata himono. No exact statistic was available, but the answerer quoted Ministry of Internal Affairs and Communications's household budge survey that in 2006 the average household spent 15,835 yen, and that for fish in general, dried fish accounted for 59.3% of consumption.
  54. ^ "ハタハタみりん干について". 兵庫県立水産試験場事業報告 (Bulletin of the Hyogo Prefectural Fisheries Experimental Station): 133–136. 1965.
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  58. ^ "못생겨도 맛은 일품! <도루묵 요리> (Looks awful but tastes great" dorumuk cooking)" (in Korean). MBC Cultural Broadcasting. January 2009. Retrieved 2013-08-10.
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japanese, sandfish, arctoscopus, japonicus, also, known, sailfin, sandfish, species, fish, percomorpha, perch, like, clade, order, trachiniformes, being, genera, family, trichodontidae, sandfishes, known, japan, hatahata, ハタハタ, 燭魚, commercially, important, fis. The Japanese sandfish Arctoscopus japonicus also known as the sailfin sandfish is a species of fish of the Percomorpha perch like clade in the order Trachiniformes being one of the two genera in the family Trichodontidae the sandfishes Known in Japan as hatahata ハタハタ 鰰 鱩 燭魚 it is a commercially important fish especially for Akita and Yamagata prefectures 4 Its habitat occurs in sandy mud bottoms ranging from the Sea of Japan to the Okhotsk Sea 1 Japanese sandfish Scientific classification Domain Eukaryota Kingdom Animalia Phylum Chordata Class Actinopterygii Order Scorpaeniformes Family Trichodontidae Genus ArctoscopusJordan and Evermann 1896 3 Species A japonicus Binomial name Arctoscopus japonicus Steindachner 1881 1 2 Synonyms 1 Trichodon japonicus Steindachner 1881 As a food source the fish has mostly been sourced locally from the coastal region of the Sea of Japan and has been designated the official prefectural fish of Akita Prefecture 5 The fish which is scaleless may be prepared whole as braised or grilled fish and has a mucilaginous consistency 6 It is also dried to make stockfish salted dried and made into himono and cured in miso as misozuke It is the main ingredient of the fish sauce called shottsuru 7 The egg masses are known as burikko 7 In Korean the fish is called 도루묵 dorumuk 1 The fish had also been used dried or in fish meal form as fertilizer and shipped to agricultural areas at one time into the 20th century Contents 1 Life cycle and behavior 1 1 Distribution 1 2 External morphology 2 Classification 2 1 Similar species 3 Nomenclature 4 Fishing practices 4 1 Fishing restrictions 5 Uses 5 1 Food ingredient 5 2 Shottsuru 5 3 Roe 6 See also 7 Footnotes 7 1 Explanatory notes 7 2 CitationsLife cycle and behavior editThe Japanese sandfish has a life span of 5 years 5 attaining a typical fork length of 20 centimetres 7 9 in 8 It is a deep sea fish that usually inhabits sandy and muddy sea floors in waters 200 to 400 metres 660 to 1 310 ft 550 metres 1 800 ft 9 deep but migrates from November to January to spawn in shallow rocky beds of seaweed 8 The males reach sexual maturity at 1 1 2 years of age and beyond and females at the 2 year old stage the individuals do not die after single spawning and have several breeding cycles during their life span 5 10 11 It preys and feeds on amphipods copepods mysidacea krill squid and fish 5 12 Distribution edit The Japanese sandfish is distributed in the northwestern Pacific Ocean particularly the Sea of Japan to the Okhotsk Sea Kurile Islands and Kamchatka Peninsula 13 Three broad regional population groups had been postulated by Okiyama 1970 based on tagging 14 and later mitochondrial DNA analysis confirmed these grouping on a genetic basis 15 The population groups are 16 17 Western Japan WJ This is a group that migrate the coast of the Sea of Japan from Tottori to Akita Prefecture It comprises the northern Sea of Japan and western Sea of Japan subgroups 18 19 The spawning grounds of the group has been assumed to be off all along the coast but bulk spawning grounds are absent around the Noto Peninsula and any further west south citation needed and in fact it has been reported that the western Sea of Japan group s spawning grounds occur in the east coast of the Korean peninsula 20 South Hokkaido SH This is a group with breeding grounds in the Pacific Ocean off Hokkaido It consists of Ishikari Bay ja Uchiura Bay Hidaka Kushiro and Nemuro subgroups 21 Eastern Korea EK This group has breeding grounds in the eastern coast of the Korean Peninsula Catch production in the Tōhoku region Northeastern Japan s Pacific coast otherwise known as Sanriku is modest and no regular spawning grounds have been confirmed 17 Migration routes have not been charted but their travel range is considered extensive since individuals from the Hokkaido and Sea of Japan population groups have been captured in the Sanriku shore 17 External morphology edit The Japanese sandfish is silvery underneath and light brown above with dark brown streaks flecked with spots 22 Tall body depth though not as tall as the Pacific sandfish Trichodon trichodon 23 Head and trunk are scaleless 24 25 A large mouth oblique and turned upwards is lined with rows of fine teeth 25 The gill flap on the cheek preopercle each has five sharp spines 22 It has a first dorsal and a second dorsal fin that are separated by a gap 22 The pectoral fins are particularly large 22 The fish lacks an air bladder 26 It is active nocturnally and during the day time lies buried in the mud or sand on the sea bottom with only the mouth and eyes and the spine visible 22 27 The egg mass roe is usually green but may also have yellow red or brown coloration Pigment components present in the eggs include bilin and carotenoids such as idoxanthin crustaxanthin and vitamin A2 aldehyde 3 dehydroretinal The bilin and retinal produces the base green color and the amount of relative idoxanthin content is the key determinant of the color variation Study of its prey such as the amphipods or the fish s stomach contents reveal negligible traces of idoxanthin and crustaxanthin which means the fish must be internally converting other carotenoid substances such as astaxanthin that are abundant in their food into idoxanthin and crustaxanthin given that fish in general cannot build their own carotenoid wholly out of building block materials Researchers hypothesize that the intake of astaxanthin influences the idoxanthin concentration in the body which result in the egg color change 28 Classification edit nbsp Wet specimens of Hatahata and Ezo hatahata at Oga Aquarium Gao The Japanese sandfish was classified under the Perciformes perch likes order Trachinoidei suborder and Trichodontidae sandfishes family However mitochondrial DNA analysis indicates that the Trichodontidae is classified within the suborder Cottoidei of the Scorpaeniformes order 29 Similar species edit Pacific sandfish Trichodon trichodon or ezo hatahata in Japanese found from the Aleutian Islands to Alaska down to California 23 30 Nomenclature editThe Japanese name hatahata may be written as 鰰 which consists of the fish radical 魚 combined with the character kami 神 god Shokusanjin Ōta Nanpo records the lore that it came to be written this way because within its scales arises the pattern of Mount Fuji and was celebrated as auspicious fish though the actual species has no scales 31 An alternate Japanese name is kaminari uwo 雷魚 thunder fish which derives from their spawning and catching season coinciding with the months when thunderstorms become frequent 6 32 33 In fact hatahata is an old onomatopoeia representing the sound of the thunderclap whose use is attested in the 10th century Kagerō Nikki and which is the root of the verb hatata ku to thunder 6 34 In the Akita dialect ja hatahata sounds like hadahada to non natives because the ta is locally pronounced in voiced unaspirated dakuon ja so that hadahada is sometimes listed as a local name for the fish 35 In Akita the fish sometimes bears the name satake uo after the Satake clan who were rules of the land around 1600 But the Satakes were originally rooted in Hitachi Province present day Ibaraki Prefecture and legend has it that the fish followed the masters from the old country Shokusanjin notes that the legend is given in the Akita Suginaoshi monogatari 秋田杉直物語 6 36 a In Tottori Prefecture the fish is called shirohata or kitaha b c Fishing practices editThe species is caught by bottom trawling offshore and by set netting ja and gillnetting the coastal spawning waters 4 The fish stock down further south are caught by Danish seine fishing 37 In Akita Prefecture each household used to buy them in bulk by the crates 5 or 10 crates at a time when in season and the surplus would be preserved as salted fish or as nukazuke to be consumed as a protein source over the winter 7 38 FAO Statistics record that in 1950 the annual catch was 10 000 tonnes 9 800 long tons 11 000 short tons accounted solely in Japan by the beginning of the 1970s Korean fisheries were catching half as much or more in tonnage as the Japanese The global peak catch occurred in 1971 with 56 700 tonnes 55 800 long tons 62 500 short tons total but by the end of the decade in 1979 there was a sharp collapse in the fish stock resulting in an annual catch of only 11 546 tonnes 11 364 long tons 12 727 short tons 39 d In Akita Prefecture peak catch volume reached 15 000 tonnes 15 000 long tons 17 000 short tons per year 40 but overfishing possibly with an interplay of water temperature regime shifts led to persisting depletion of stock 41 so that the fishermen of Akita Prefecture led by its Fisheries Cooperative Association ja self imposed a total moratorium on the catch from 1992 to 1995 5 42 In 1999 four participating prefectures formed a fisheries management organization to manage the fish stock followed in 2003 by a formal Resource Recovery Plan 資源回復計画 for these prefectures 5 In Korea the catch was 25 000 tonnes 25 000 long tons 28 000 short tons per year in 1971 but suffered a similar decline to 4 000 tonnes 3 900 long tons 4 400 short tons by 2008 and that country has also instituted conservation measures 8 Tottori prefecture is another area with significant participation in catching this species Whereas Akita targets egg carrying adults approach the surface to spawn Tottori fishing practices capture the deep water migrating populations by bottom trawling so that the caught fish tends to be fattier though they do not carry eggs The catch season for Tottori spans from September to May 43 44 Fishing restrictions edit In 1999 the Aomori Akita Yamagata and Niigata prefectures instituted restrictions prohibiting capture of fish measuring less than 15 cm 5 9 in 45 Accidents and drownings involving sports fishermen going overboard 46 as well as poaching egg masses scavenging eggs washed ashore also constitute poaching 47 has prompted regulations and patrolling efforts by the Fisheries Cooperative Association ja and police 47 48 49 50 Foraging possessing and engaging in sales of egg masses are prohibited Aomori and Akita Fishing method restrictions Aomori Akita Yamagata Uses editAt one time dried hatahata was one type of fish based fertilizer fish manure being trafficked in Japan 51 e Food ingredient edit nbsp Dried himono or stockfish of hatahata The fish lacks scale has few small bones and the spine separates easily from the flesh so that they are usually poached or broiled whole or just with the head off If the fish is fresh snapping the bone at the base of the tail beforehand will make it easier for the spine to come off easily after broiling Fresh hatahata can be served salted and broiled or be poached in a pot flavored with soy sauce sake kasu and especially shottsuru In Akita the pot dish would be flavored with shottsuru a fish sauce traditionally made by curing the fish in brine 7 Another preparation is the dengaku ja slathered with sweet miso paste and broiled 52 which is eaten not only in Akita but also in the Shōnai region ja around Sakata Yamagata citation needed The fish is preserved in various ways such as nukazuke pickled in rice bran and salt 7 himono as dried fish 53 as mirinboshi ja mirin based flavored dried fish 54 It is also made into a preserved narezushi in Akita the preserving medium consists of rice and koji Aspergillus oryzae mold for brewing sake 6 7 but in Tottori Prefecture the hatahata narezushi is known locally as shirohatazushi ja and uses okara soy pulp 55 56 Fresh hatahata is suitable for mizuni ja or poaching or simmering in water the dish in Yamagata is called yu age 57 and eaten with soy sauce It can be made into hatahata jiru miso soup but the miso should be dissolved in the broth before the fish is plunged otherwise the fish falls apart citation needed In South Korea the fish known there as dorumuk Korean 도루묵 is eaten in communities in Gangwon Province and elsewhere along the Sea of Japan In Korea it is mainly an ingredient for jjigae hot pot dishes but sometimes the roe laden females are grilled and eaten 58 Shottsuru edit Main article shottsuru nbsp shottsuru Locally a fish sauce called shottsuru is made from this fish The sauce which literally means salty juice 7 is made by pickling and fermenting the salted fish and straining out the debris The fish sauce is used to flavor the shottsuru nabe or pot dish that uses this flavoring to cook the hatahata with vegetable and other ingredients 6 7 In the Akita dialect the pot dish also sometimes called shottsuru kayaki with kayaki ja being the local term for nabe or hot pot dish citation needed Roe edit In the Akita dialect ja the roe of this species is called buriko 52 The fish is caught during its spawning season when many of the females are loaded with eggs 2 3 millimetres 0 079 0 118 in in diameter The eggs are surrounded by slimy mucous citation needed Fresh roe that is cooked will burst and make light popping sounds when eaten but roe from the fish preserved in salt or miso turn rubbery and hard to chew resulting in a more blunt sound that sounds like buri buri which resulted in its name f The Japanese folk ballad known as Akita Ondo mentions the Oga buriko in the lyrics which is a reference to the roe clusters citation needed See also edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Arctoscopus japonicus nbsp Wikispecies has information related to Arctoscopus japonicus List of common fish namesFootnotes editExplanatory notes edit Lowry explains the name stuck after the success of the Satake clan s success at exporting the fish as fertilizer 6 Lowry gives kihata 6 as do some Japanese source but kitaha seems to be supported by the majority Called shima aji in the vicinity of Nō Niigata though this is misleading that term refers to the white trevally in mainstream Japan 漁村と島 2004 p 81 Akita Prefecture alone caught 15 000 tonnes 15 000 long tons 17 000 short tons per year at its peak 40 Statistics for quantities entering the Tokyo Market indicate over 15 000 hyō were shipped in 1903 but none during the other years from 1902 1911 Each hyō straw bag contained 8 4 shō 東京商業会議所統計年報 1924 pp 34 35 There are alternate etymologies for buriko One theory is that the mucous covered eggs bind together and are hard to separate leading to the name 不離子 buriko unseparable children Another theory proposes that during the Edo period when collecting the eggs was prohibited a forager evaded an official s interrogation saying they were the eggs of buri yellowtail 59 Citations edit a b c d Froese Rainer Pauly Daniel eds 2018 Arctoscopus japonicus in FishBase February 2018 version Arctoscopus japonicus Integrated Taxonomic Information System Retrieved 25 September 2018 Bailly N ed 2014 Arctoscopus Jordan amp Evermann 1896 FishBase World Register of Marine Species Retrieved 20 June 2018 a b Masuda Hajime 1984 The Fishes of the Japanese Archipelago Vol 1 Tokai University Press p 221 ISBN 978 4486050544 a b c d e f Makino Mitsutaku 2011 Fisheries Management in Japan Its institutional features and case studies Springer p 178 ISBN 978 9400717770 a b c d e f g h Lowry Dave 2010 The Connoisseur s Guide to Sushi ReadHowYouWant com pp 116 118 ISBN 978 1458764140 a b c d e f g h Homma Gaku 1991 The Folk Art of Japanese Country Cooking A Traditional Diet for Today s World North Atlantic Books p 69 ISBN 978 1556430985 a b c Kim Chang Gil Lee Sung Il Cha Hyung Kee Yang Jae Hyeong Son Yong Soo 2011 Enhancement of sandfish Arctoscopus japonicus by artificial reefs in the eastern waters of Korea in Bortone Stephen A Brandini Frederico Pereira Fabi Gianna Otake Shinya eds Artificial Reefs in Fisheries Management CRC Press pp 111 124 ISBN 978 1439820087 Fedorov V V I A Chereshnev M V Nazarkin A V Shestakov and V V Volobuev 2003 Catalog of marine and freshwater fishes of the northern part of the Sea of Okhotsk Vladivostok Dalnauka 2003 204 p 平成 24 年度ハタハタ日本海北部系群の資源評価 PDF Archived from the original PDF on October 29 2013 Tomoda Tsutomu Hotta Kazuo Morioka Taizo 2006 Growth spawning and migration of hatchery reared Japanese sandfish Arctoscopus japonicus released in Nanao Bay and Toyama Bay Nippon Suisan Gakkaishi 72 6 1039 1045 doi 10 2331 suisan 72 1039 abstract Komoto Ryota 甲本亮太 Kudo Yuki 工藤裕紀 Takatsu Tetsuya 髙津哲也 2011 Vertical distribution and feeding habits of Japanese sandfish Arctoscopus japonicus larvae and juveniles off Akita Prefecture in the Sea of Japan 水産増殖 Suisan Zōshoku 59 4 615 630 hdl 2115 51002 abstract Okiyama 1990 cited in Shibata 1993 p 17 Okiyama M 沖山宗雄 ハタハタの資源生物学的研究 II系統群 予報 日本海区水産研究所研究報告 22 59 69 cited by Shirai et al 2006 p 357 Finding in Shirai et al 2006 summarized in Shirai Goto amp Hirose 2007 p 47 latter is in Japanese Shirai Shigeru Kuranaga Ryoji Sugiyama Hideki Higuchi Masahito 2006 Population structure of the sailfin sandfish Arcto scopus japonicus Trichodontidae in the Sea of Japan Ichthyological Research 53 4 357 368 doi 10 1007 s10228 006 0356 0 S2CID 22867391 a b c Shirai S M 白井茂 Goto Tomoaki 後藤友明 Hirose Taro 廣瀬太郎 2007 2004年2 3月に得られた岩手沖のハタハタは日本海から来遊した 魚類学雑誌 54 1 47 58 Shirai Shigeru M 白井滋 2009 ハタハタ 日本海西部系群の由来 予報 PDF Ichthyological Research pdf alternate site Archived 2014 03 30 at the Wayback Machine Watanabe Kyuji Sakuramoto Kazumi Minami Takashi Suzuki Naoki 2006 Population structure of the sailfin sandfish Arcto scopus japonicus Trichodontidae in the Sea of Japan PDF Bulletin of the Japanese Society of Fisheries Oceanography 70 4 221 228 Choi et al 1983 cited in Watanabe et al 2006 p 221 ハタハタの生き残り条件を探る Exploring the survival conditions of the beach PDF Hokkaido Research Organization in Japanese 2006 Archived from the original PDF on 2013 10 29 Retrieved 1 March 2014 a b c d e Jordan David Starr Evermann Barton Warren 1902 A Review of the Trachinoid Fishes and their Supposed Allies found in the Waters of Japan Proceedings of the United States National Museum 24 1263 484 doi 10 5479 si 00963801 24 1263 461 a b Shibata Satoru 柴田理 1993 ハタハタとエゾハタハタの比較 PDF 日本海ブロック試験研究録 29 17 21 Jordan David Starr 1907 Fishes Henry Holt p 578 a b Chereshnev I A Nazarki M V 2006 On the occurrence of Japanese sandfish Arctoscopus japonicus Trichodontidae in the region of Tauisk Bay of the Sea of Okhotsk Journal of Ichthyology 42 683 686 Boulenger G A 1901 Classification of Teleostean Fishes The Annals and Magazine of Natural History Including Zoology Botany and Geology 7 8 269 Herald Earl Stannard 1961 Living fishes of the world Doubleday p 205 Morioka T 森岡泰三 Hotta K 堀田和夫 Tomoda T 友田務 Nakamura L 中村弘二 2005 ハタハタArctoscopus japonicusの卵塊が多色化する要因 A possible factor influencing the color variation in Japanese sandfish Arctoscopus japonicus egg masses 日本水産学会誌 Journal of the Japanese Society of Fisheries Science 71 2 212 214 doi 10 2331 suisan 71 212 水産総合研究センター in Japanese August 2001 ハタハタのミトコンドリアDNA全塩基配列の決定と類縁関係の解明 水産週報 1553 Press release NDL data Okiyama M 1990 Contrast in reproductive style between two species of sandfish family Trichodontidae Fishery Bulletin 88 543 549 蜀山人 一話一言 巻十一大田 南畝 1907 蜀山人全集 vol 4 吉川弘文館 p 291 鱗の中に富士山のもやうを生じ候故 めでたき魚と祝し 文字はいつごろよりか魚篇に神と書なり Nihon Dōbutsu Gakkai 1897 Annotationes Zoologicae Japonenses vol 1 Tokyo p 108 a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Ashburne John Abe Yoshi 2002 Japan Lonely Planet p 51 ISBN 9781740590105 Mozume Takayo 物集高世 Yokoi Tokifuyu 横井時冬 eds 1895 支言考 Kōten Kōkyujo kōen 皇典講究所講演 vol 15 皇典講究所 p 12 澁澤 敬三 1944 日本魚名集覽 第二部 生活社 p 175 大田 1907 vol 4 p 291 Watanabe et al 2006 p 221 秋田市 Japan ed 2003 秋田市史 Vol 16 民俗編 p 300 Akita City s published municipal history governmental publication FAO Capture Production of Arctoscopus japonicus t n 2 FishBase 2010 Retrieved 13 April 2014 a b 竹内 健 1981 ハタハタ 秋田大百科事典 encyclopedia 秋田魁新報社 p 660 Watanabe Kyuji Sakuramoto Kazumi Sugiyama Hideki Suzuki Naoki 2005 Collapse of the Arctoscopus japonicus catch in the Sea of Japan environmental factors or overfishing PDF Global Environmental Research 9 2 131 137 The fishery closure years are graphed in fig 4 Watanabe et al 2005 食のみやこ鳥取県 ハタハタ 鳥取県 Retrieved 2012 12 18 鳥取県観光案内 とっとり旅の生情報 社団法人 鳥取県観光連盟 Archived from the original on 2013 01 28 Retrieved 2013 02 26 漁協のページ Akita Prefecture Fisherise Cooperative Association Archived from the original on 2012 04 23 Retrieved 2012 03 23 Ajigaswaa police station Aomori Prefectural Police Archived from the original on 2014 04 13 Retrieved 2012 03 23 a b ハタハタのブリコ密漁防ごう 鯵ケ沢漁協など呼び掛け Mutsu Shimpō 陸奥新報 陸奥新報社 2008 11 28 Archived from the original on 22 March 2010 Retrieved 2009 11 16 青森県水産情報 遊漁を楽しむ皆様へ ハタハタ遊漁者の皆さんへ 青森県 Retrieved 2012 03 23 はたはた遊漁者のみなさまへ 秋田県 2011 09 01 Archived from the original on 2011 10 27 Retrieved 2012 03 23 ハタハタの採捕方法規制 PDF 山形県 Retrieved 2012 03 23 permanent dead link Kellner O 1889 Researches on Composition of several Japanese Fertilizers Bulletin of the Imperial Colledge of Agriculture 4 6 a b めいぶつ秋田県 日本語ジャーナル 40 2007 11 15 ハタハタの干物の市場規模を知りたい 2011 04 20 Retrieved 13 April 2014 FAQ published by Tottori Prefecture Library Questioner sought market size of hatahata himono No exact statistic was available but the answerer quoted Ministry of Internal Affairs and Communications s household budge survey that in 2006 the average household spent 15 835 yen and that for fish in general dried fish accounted for 59 3 of consumption ハタハタみりん干について 兵庫県立水産試験場事業報告 Bulletin of the Hyogo Prefectural Fisheries Experimental Station 133 136 1965 成瀬 宇平 2011 47都道府県 魚食文化百科 丸善出版 pp 183 275 日本の食生活全集鳥取編集委員会編 日本の食生活全集31 聞き書鳥取の食事 p24 p56 1991年 東京 社団法人農山漁村文化協会 ISBN 4 540 91003 5 成瀬 2011 p 79 못생겨도 맛은 일품 lt 도루묵 요리 gt Looks awful but tastes great dorumuk cooking in Korean MBC Cultural Broadcasting January 2009 Retrieved 2013 08 10 富木 隆蔵 1981 ブリコ 秋田大百科事典 encyclopedia 秋田魁新報社 p 714 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Japanese sandfish amp oldid 1220922605, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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