SPAWNING HERRING
Herrings' annual spawning is one of the most spectacular happenings in nature. Great hordes of those foot-long fish of coastal ocean waters across much of the world annually gather in estuaries, fjords and other back-waters off the oceans in unbelievable spawning spectacles. Each female herring spawns about 20,000 eggs on kelp, eelgrass and other aquatic vegetation, and other shoreline objects. The tremendous masses of tiny, sticky eggs adhere to those objects in layers, while vast clouds of milky-white, herring sperm, that cover many acres of shallow-water shorelines, fertilize those eggs. Not all those billions of herring eggs hatch, however. A variety each of crabs, fish, gulls, sandpipers, plovers and other kinds of marine life, plus black bears and other shoreline creatures, eat many eggs. Still millions upon millions of herring fry do hatch and form vast schools of themselves along ocean shorelines. ...