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قراءة كتاب Within the Deep Cassell's "Eyes and No Eyes" Series, Book VIII.
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Within the Deep Cassell's "Eyes and No Eyes" Series, Book VIII.
CASSELL'S "EYES AND NO EYES" SERIES BOOK VIII
WITHIN THE DEEP
R. CADWALLADER SMITH
WITH EIGHT COLOURED PLATES AND MANY BLACK-AND-WHITE ILLUSTRATIONS
CONTENTS
LESSON | |
I. | FISH FOR BREAKFAST |
II. | THE STORY OF THE FLAT FISH |
III. | SEALS |
IV. | SOME STRANGE NURSERIES |
V. | THE OGRE OF THE DEEP |
VI. | THE WHALE |
VII. | TIGERS OF THE SEA |
VIII. | THE DANGERS OF THE DEEP |
IX. | THE FISH OF OUR ROCK-POOLS |
X. | SOME CURIOUS FISHES |
XI. | THE GARDEN OF THE SEA |
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
COLOURED PLATES
THE HERRING FLEET AT WORK IN THE NORTH SEA (missing)
THE SEA-ELEPHANT
CORALS OF MANY KINDS
WHALING!
A CORAL REEF
FISHES (No. 1)
FISHES (No. 2)
A GARDEN IN THE SEA (missing)
CASSELL'S
"EYES AND NO EYES"
WITHIN THE DEEP
LESSON I
FISH FOR BREAKFAST
Of all the fish in the wide ocean world, the Herring deserves to be called the king. He gives work to thousands of people, and food to millions. Many towns exist because of him; if he failed to visit our seas, these big towns would shrink to tiny villages.
There are several interesting kinds of Herring, but we will first look at the one we know so well, which is such good food, either fresh or as dried "kipper" or "bloater."
The Herring loves to swim in a shoal. From the time he leaves the egg, during his babyhood, and all through his life, he explores the sea with thousands of other Herrings crowded round him. His name is from a foreign word--heer or herr, an army. His enemies--ourselves among them--find this habit of his a good one. It makes him such easy prey.
Here is a dense shoal of fish, moving slowly along near the surface. To catch some is quite easy. The Dolphin, or Shark, or other large fish-hunter, merely has to rush into their ranks with wide-open mouth. Hordes of Dog-fish feast on the edges of the shoal. And Gannets, Cormorants, Gulls and other sea-birds can take their fill with ease.
The Herring shoal is a banquet at which the fish-eating sea creatures feed heartily, and man comes along, to spread his nets in the path of the shoal. But what matter a few million Herrings when the sea is packed with billions more! In the North Sea, one shoal was seen which was over four miles long and two miles wide. In such a mass there would be, at the very least, twenty thousand million Herring; and this shoal was but one out of many thousand shoals. One might as well try to count the grains of sand on the shore as the Herrings in the wide ocean.
These huge shoals do not stay long in one part of the sea. They make journeys of many miles, each shoal seeming to keep to itself. Like every other creature, the Herring goes where his food is. What food does he find? He swallows the small life of the sea, tiny transparent things like baby shrimps, prawns, crabs, and so on, which swarm even in the cold water which the Herring loves.
They are good juicy food, these little mites, and very plentiful; so no wonder the Herring becomes plump. He eats greedily of this good food. For instance, a young Herring, picked up on the beach at Yarmouth, was found to contain no less than one hundred and forty-three small shrimps. Not a bad dinner for a fish the length of this page! The ocean teems with small creatures; even the huge Greenland Whale feeds on them, and the Herring seems to live on little else.
Well, the shoals of Herring begin to move from their feeding place in the deeps, and come nearer the coast. As they get to shallower water they are crowded together near the surface. Where are they going, and why?
Perhaps you can guess--they seek warmer, shallower water, in which to lay their eggs. Now is the time for the fisherman! If the Herring kept to the deep they would be quite safe--and we should have no nice plump Herrings on our breakfast tables! Yes, now is the time to spread out miles of nets in the path of this living mass of silvery fish. They are in fine condition, well fed, and ready to lay their eggs.
They are moving slowly but surely towards the right place where those eggs should be laid. What guides them? Why do they go this way and not that in the vast ocean? We do not really know what guides them; so we say that they obey a wonderful, unfailing guide--"instinct."
Of course you have seen and tasted the "hard" roe of a Herring; but I do not suppose you have ever troubled to count all those little round eggs. Each roe contains some thirty thousand of them! What a huge number of young ones for one Herring! Still, this is not a large