Wolf herring
Template:Short description Template:Automatic taxobox

Wolf herrings are a family (Chirocentridae) of two marine species of ray-finned fish related to herrings.
Both species have elongated bodies and jaws with long sharp teeth that aid their ravenous appetites, primarily for other fish.<ref name=EoF>Template:Cite book</ref> They can grow up to1 m in length and have silvery sides with bluish backs.
They are commercially fished and sold fresh or frozen.
Wolf Herring tends to stay near costal water off Africa and Asian. Mostly in the Indian Ocean, but some Wolf Herrings have also been spotted near Australian beaches.
Species
- Chirocentrus dorab (Fabricius, 1775) - Dorab wolf-herring, found in warm coastal waters from the Red Sea to Japan and Australia
- Chirocentrus nudus Swainson, 1839 - whitefin wolf-herring, found in a similar range (This species is difficult to distinguish from C. dorab; the former has a black mark on its dorsal fin. This species is also known to eat crabs in addition to its usual diet of smaller fish.)
References
Lavoué, S., Bertrand, J. A. M., Shen, K., Ratmuangkhwang, S., Sado, T., Miya, M., & Siti Azizah, M. N. (2019). Deep genetic differentiation between two morphologically similar species of wolf herrings (Teleostei, Clupeoidei, Chirocentridae). Journal of Applied Ichthyology, 35(3), 693–700. https://doi.org/10.1111/jai.13886
Mohammadi, M., Mokhtarian, K., Kardar, G. A., Farrokhi, S., Sadroddiny, E., Khorramizadeh, M. R., & Falak, R. (2017). Expression of recombinant parvalbumin from wolf-herring fish and determination of its IgE-binding