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Tench

The tench or doctor fish is a fresh- and brackish-water fish of the order Cypriniformes found throughout Eurasia from Western Europe including Britain and Ireland east into Asia as far as the Ob and Yenisei Rivers. It is also found in Lake Baikal. It normally inhabits slow-moving freshwater habitats, particularly lakes and lowland rivers.

Taxonomy
The tench was first formally described in as Cyprinus tinca by Carl Linnaeus in 1758 in the 10th edition of Systema Naturae with its type locality given as "European lakes". In 1764 François Alexandre Pierre de Garsault proposed the new monospecific genus Tinca, with Cyprinus tinca as the type species by absolute tautonymy. while other authorities classified both these genera in the subfamily Leuciscinae with other Eurasian minnows, but more recent phylogenetic studies have supported it belonging to its own family Tincidae. The Tincidae was first proposed as a name in 1878 by David Starr Jordan. Evolution The Tincidae have a rather comprehensive fossil record in Europe. They first appear during the Late Oligocene with the fossil genera †Tarsichthys Troschel, 1854 and the potentially synonymous †Palaeotinca'' Obrhelová, 1969. For the extant Tinca, the fossil species †Tinca furcata Agassiz, 1832 is known from Late Miocene-aged deposits near Ohningen, and the contemporaneous †Tinca micropygoptera Agassiz, 1839 is known from near Steinheim am Albuch. The extinct species †Tinca sayanica Sytchevskaya, 1989 is known from the Late Miocene or Early Pliocene of Mongolia. †Tinca pliocenica Gaudant, 1998 is known from the Pliocene of Germany. From the Late Miocene onwards, Tinca remains are overall widespread in freshwater deposits of Europe and West Asia, although they are usually not assignable to species. The earliest remains of the modern Tinca tinca are from the late Pliocene of the Netherlands. ==Ecology==
Ecology
The tench is most often found in still waters with a clay or muddy substrate and abundant vegetation. This species is rare in clear waters across stony substrate, and is absent altogether from fast-flowing streams. It tolerates water with a low oxygen concentration, and snails and pea clams in well-vegetated waters. Breeding takes place in shallow water usually among aquatic plants where the sticky green eggs can be deposited. Growth is rapid, and fish may reach a weight of within the first year. ==Morphology==
Morphology
Tench have a stocky, carp-like shape and olive-green skin, darker above and almost golden below. The tail fin is square in shape. The other fins are distinctly rounded in shape. Maximum size is , though most specimens are much smaller. A record fish caught in 2001 in England had a weight of . The eyes are small and red-orange in colour. and noticeable muscles around the base of these fins generally absent in females. Males also possess a very thick and flattened outer ray to the ventral fins. Adult females may have a more convex ventral profile when compared with males. The tench has very small scales, which are deeply embedded in a thick skin, making it as slippery as an eel. Folklore has it that this slime cured any sick fish that rubbed against it, and from this belief arose the name doctor fish. ==Golden tench==
Golden tench
An artificially bred variety of tench called the golden tench is a popular ornamental fish for ponds. This form varies in colour from pale gold through to dark red, and some fish have black or red spots on the flanks and fins. Though somewhat similar to the goldfish, because these fish have such small scales, their quality is rather different. ==Economic significance==
Economic significance
Tench are edible, working well in recipes that would otherwise call for carp, but are not commonly consumed. ==Angling==
Angling
Large tench may be found in gravel pits or deep, slow-moving waters with a clay or silt bottom and copious aquatic vegetation. The best methods and bait to catch tench are float fishing and ledgering with a swim feeder using maggots, sweetcorn, pellets, bread, and worms. Fish over in weight are very strong fighters when caught on a rod. ==References==
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