How Does a Fisherman's Net Capture So Many Different Species?

A fisherman’s net is like a big toy that catches many kinds of friends, all at once!

Imagine you have a basket full of different toys: balls, blocks, and little cars. If you shake the basket, they all fall out in a mix. A fisherman's net works kind of like that.

How the Net Works

The net has many holes, just like a sieve you use to strain pasta. Some holes are big enough for big fish to go through, and some are small enough for tiny fish to get caught. It’s like having one toy basket with different-sized holes, each hole catches a different kind of toy.

Also, the net moves in the water, swishing around like you're playing tag in the pool. Fish don’t know where to run, and some get tangled up in the strings of the net, just like how your legs can get caught in a jump rope!

So, when the fisherman pulls the net out of the water, he gets all kinds of fish, big ones, small ones, even some that are hiding behind others! It’s like finding a treasure box full of different surprises.

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Examples

  1. A fisherman casts a net into the sea, and it catches both small fish and large ones.
  2. The holes in the net are just right for catching smaller fish but not too big to let bigger fish escape.
  3. Fishermen use different nets depending on what kind of fish they want to catch.

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