Sand eel or sandeel is the common name used for a considerable number of species of fish. While they are not true eels, they are eel-like in their appearance and can grow up to Template:Convert in length.<ref name="NatureScot 2019-10-25">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Many species are found off the western coasts of Europe from Spain to Scotland, and in the Mediterranean and Baltic Seas.
Sand eels are an important food source for seabirds, including puffins and kittiwakes. They are a commercially important for the production of fish meal and made up 4% of fish globally caught for fish-meal production (behind anchovy, capelin, and blue whiting) between 1997 and 2001.<ref name="Huntington 2004">Template:Cite report</ref>
HabitatEdit
The preferential habitat for sand eels is a seabed floor, with a relatively smooth bottom of gravelly sand; an example of this prime habitat is the floor of the Sea of the Hebrides.
Sand eel speciesEdit
Most sand eels are sea fish of the genera Hyperoplus (greater sand eels), Gymnammodytes or Ammodytes.<ref name="WoRMS">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The three genera listed above all fall within the family Ammodytidae, the sand lances. Members of these genera found in other oceans are not usually called sand eels, and species from other parts of the world that are known as sand eels are usually less closely related.
Commercial fishingEdit
Traditionally, they have been little exploited for human food, but are a major target of industrial fishing for animal feed and fertilizer.<ref name="DauntWanless2008">Template:Cite journal</ref> Increasing fishing for them is thought to be causing problems for some of their natural predators, especially the auks, which take them in deeper water.
An instance of this was the RSPB report linking a population crash of seabirds in the North Sea to fishing for sand eels.<ref name="CarrollBolton2017">Template:Cite journal</ref><ref name="RSPB 2017-06-14">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> This led to political pressure for the closure of this fishery; the seabird populations subsequently improved.<ref name="BMF 2020-10-29">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
They are also used as artificial lures to catch fish.