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
family, as fish families go. The Cod lays about
nine million eggs!
At last the Herrings reach the breeding
grounds that they sought, and the eggs are laid.
The eggs of most sea-fish just drift on the surface
of the ocean, at the mercy of their enemies, and washing
here and there as the current sends them. The
Herring’s eggs sink to the bottom and, being
rather sticky, adhere wherever they fall.
There they lie in masses, on the bed
of the sea, and then guests of all kinds hasten to
enjoy such a rare feast of eggs, laid ready for them.
One of the first guests is the Haddock. He comes
in his thousands, greedy for his part of the good
food; but, knowing this, the fishermen also hasten
to the spot, and the Haddock pays dearly for his love
of Herring eggs.
Only a few out of each thousand eggs
will escape their enemies, and the baby Herrings,
which hatch in about a fortnight, run many dangers;
thus, in the end, the huge family of Mrs. Herring
is reduced to a small one. Even so, there are
countless numbers of the tiny fish. They soon
grow shining scales, like those of their parents,
and move towards the coast.
It is a pretty sight, these little
silvery Herrings playing in the shallow water.
Millions of them dart about and flash in the sunshine,
during the summer months, round our coasts. Sea-birds
and other enemies hover round, to feast on the tiny
fish. Great numbers of these baby Herrings are
caught and sold as “Whitebait.”
The older Herrings, having laid their
eggs, leave the shallows, and make their way into
deep water. They are no longer nice to eat, and
the Herring harvest is over until the following season.
In our talk on flat-fish we shall
notice how they are caught, near the bed of the sea,
in the trawl-net. Now this net is of no
use for the capture of Herrings. They swim in
the open water, near the surface, and so another kind
of trap, the drift-net, is used.
Hundreds of vessels sail from our
fishing ports when King Herring is about. Each
vessel carries a number of drift-nets. These nets
are to be let down like a hanging wall, in the path
of the shoal, at night. Corks or bladders are
fastened to the upper edge of the nets. Of course
they are all mended and made ready before the vessels
reach the fishing grounds. It is not easy to
know where to shoot the nets; all the skill and knowledge
of the fisherman are needed to locate the shoals, and,
without this knowledge, he would come home with an
empty vessel. Even as it is, he sometimes catches
no more fish than would fill his hat.
A sharp look-out is kept. An
oily gleam in the sea tells the knowing fisherman
that the shoal is there; or he may see a Gull swoop
down and carry off a Herring. Then the nets are
put out in the path of the shoal. A big fleet
of fishing vessels may let down a thousand miles of
nets!
The Herrings, not seeing the fine
wall of net, swim into it. Now the openings in
the net the meshes are one inch
across, just wide enough for the Herring to poke his
head through. Once through, he is caught.
His gill-covers prevent him from drawing back again.
Thousands of other Herrings are held tight, all around
him, and the rest of the shoal scatters for the time
being.
When the nets are hauled in, the fisherman
beholds a mighty catch, a sight to repay him for all
his trouble. On being taken from its watery home
each Herring is dead almost at once “as
dead as a Herring.”
Then comes the race to the market.
Once in port, the vessels are rapidly emptied.
Hundreds of thousands of shining, silvery bodies are
piled on the quays a sight worth seeing!
An army of packers gets to work; and the fresh fish
are soon on the rail, speeding to the great fish markets,
on the way to your breakfast table.
The story of the Herring fishery is
one of deep interest, and of great importance.
Millions of Herrings are caught every year, forming
a cheap and good food. Yet there are uncountable
numbers left; and there is not the least danger that
our nets can ever empty the sea of this wonderful
little fish.
The Herring has several smaller relatives,
all of them being excellent food for us. The
Pilchard is one of them; the Sardine is merely a young
Pilchard. Countless myriads of Pilchards
visit the Cornish coast; strangely enough, they frequent
only this corner of our seas.
Another cousin of the Herring, the
Sprat, is also a fine food, and so cheap that poor
people can enjoy it. Baby Herrings and baby
Sprats are caught in great quantity, and sold
under the name of “Whitebait.” It
was thought, at one time, that the Whitebait was another
kind of fish; but Whitebait are really the Herring
and Sprat in their baby state.
EXERCISES
1. Name several enemies of the
Herrin. Describe the eggs of the Herring,
and where they are lai. What is a “drift-net,”
and how is it used? 4. What is a Sardine?
What is a “Whitebait?”