List of types of seafood
The following is a list of types of seafood. Seafood is any form of sea life regarded as food by humans. It prominently includes fish, shellfish, and roe. Shellfish include various species of molluscs, crustaceans, and echinoderms. Historically, sea mammals such as whales and dolphins have been consumed as food, though that happens to a lesser extent in modern times. Edible sea plants, such as some seaweeds and microalgae, are widely eaten as seafood around the world, especially in Asia (see the category of sea vegetables). In North America, although not generally in the United Kingdom, the term "seafood" is extended to fresh water organisms eaten by humans, so any edible aquatic life may be broadly referred to as seafood.
Fish
- Anchovies
- Barracuda
- Basa
- Bass (see also striped bass)
- Black cod/Sablefish
- Blowfish
- Bluefish
- Bombay duck
- Bream
- Brill
- Butter fish
- Catfish
- Cod (see also Pacific cod and Atlantic cod)
- Dogfish
- Dorade
- Eel
- Flounder
- Grouper
- Haddock
- Hake
- Halibut
- Herring
- Ilish
- John Dory
- Lamprey
- Lingcod
- Mackerel
- Mahi Mahi
- Monkfish
- Mullet
- Orange roughy
- Parrotfish
- Patagonian toothfish (also called Chilean sea bass)
- Perch
- Pike
- Pilchard
- Pollock
- Pomfret
- Pompano
- Sablefish
- Salmon
- Sanddab, particularly Pacific sanddab
- Sardine
- Sea bass
- Shad (see also alewife and American shad)
- Shark
- Skate
- Smelt
- Snakehead
- Snapper (see also rockfish, rock cod and Pacific snapper)
- Sole
- Sprat
- Sturgeon
- Surimi
- Swordfish
- Tilapia
- Tilefish
- Trout (see also rainbow trout)
- Tuna (see also albacore tuna, yellowfin tuna, bigeye tuna, bluefin tuna and dogtooth tuna)
- Turbot
- Wahoo
- Whitefish
- Whiting
- Witch (righteye flounder)
- Purified Water
Roe
Shellfish
Crustaceans
- Crabs
- Craw/Cray Fish
- Lobsters
- Shrimps/Prawns
Mollusca
- Cockle
- Cuttlefish
- Clam
- Loco
- Mussel
- Octopus
- Oyster
- Periwinkle
- Scallop (see also bay scallop and sea scallop)
- Squid
- Conch (Snails)
- Nautilus
Tunicates (sea squirts)
Microcosmus sabatieri, also known as sea fig or violet, is eaten in parts of Europe.
See also
- List of seafood dishes – Wikipedia list article
- Seafood restaurant
Notes
- Omori, Makoto; Nakano, Eiji (2001). Jellyfish Fisheries in Southeast Asia. Hydrobiologia. pp. 19–26.