Wednesday, March 18, 2009
The Monkfish is Mucho Ugly!
Monkfish (or Headfish) is the English name of a number of types of fish in the northwest Atlantic, most notably the species of the anglerfish genus Lophius and the angelshark genus Squatina. The term is also occasionally used for a European sea monster more often called a sea monk.
Monkfish is the most common English name for the genus Lophius in the northwest Atlantic but goosefish[citation needed] is used as the equivalent term on the eastern coast of North America. Lophius has three long filaments sprouting from the middle of the head; these are the detached and modified three first spines of the anterior dorsal fin. As in most anglerfish species, the longest filament is the first, which terminates in an irregular growth of flesh, the esca. This modified fin ray is movable in all directions. This esca is used as a lure to attract other fishes, which monkfish then typically swallow whole. Experiments have shown, however, that whether the prey has been attracted to the lure or not is not strictly relevant, as the action of the jaws is an automatic reflex triggered by contact with the esca.
It grows to a length of more than 5 ft; specimens of 3 ft are common.
Two species Lophius piscatorius and Lophius budegassa are found in north-western Europe and referred to as monkfish, with L. piscatorius by far the most common species around the British Isles and of major fishery interest. In Europe and North America, the texture of the tail meat of fish of the genus Lophius, is sometimes compared to lobster tail and has been alluded to as the "poor man's lobster." According to Seafood Watch, monkfish is currently on the list of fish that American consumers who are sustainability minded should avoid.
Monday, March 16, 2009
Stonefish - Ugly and Dangerous!
The sting causes excruciating pain and a great deal of swelling rapidly develops causing death to tissues. The severity of the symptoms depends on the depth of penetration and the number of spines penetrated. The symptoms of the venom are muscle weakness, temporary paralysis and shock, which may result in death if not treated.
Saturday, March 14, 2009
Video of the Gulper Eel
Thursday, March 12, 2009
Six Feet of Ugly: Gulper Eel
The Gulper Eel, scientifically known as Eurypharynx pelecanoides is actually a species of Saccopharyngiformes. Saccopharyngiformes is an order of unusual ray-finned fish superficially similar to eels, but with many internal differences. Most of the fish in this order are deep-sea types known from only a handful of specimens. Saccopharyngiformes are also bioluminescent in several species. Some, such as the swallowers, can live as deep as 10,000 feet (3,000 m) in the ocean, well into the aphotic zone.
Saccopharyngiforms lack several bones, such as the symplectic bone, the bones of the opercle, and ribs. They also have no scales, pelvic fins, or swim bladder. The jaws are quite large, and several types are notable for being able to consume fish larger than themselves. Their myomeres (muscle segments) are V-shaped instead of W-shaped like in all other fish, and their lateral line has no pores, instead it is modified to groups of elevated tubules.
Diet: The gulper eel eats fish, copepods, shrimp, and plankton. It uses its mouth like a net by opening its large mouth and swimming at its prey.
Size: 3 to 6 feet.
Appearance: The gulper eel is much different in appearance than most other eel species. The most notable feature on this bizarre creature is its large and loosely hinged mouth. Its pectoral fins are so tiny as to be almost nonexistent. Unlike many other deep sea creatures, it has very small eyes. It is believed that the eyes evolved to detect faint traces of light rather than form images. The gulper eel also has a very long, whip-like tail. They are usually black or dark green in color with a white line on either side of its dorsal fin.
Did you know? The end of the tail is tipped with a light-producing organ known as a photophore. Through a process known as bioluminescence, the photophore glows pink and can give off occasional red flashes. Since the eel's body is not built for chasing prey, It is believed that the eel uses this light as a fishing lure to attract fish and other creatures close to its enormous mouth. When the prey is in range, the eel lunges and snaps is up in its gigantic mouth.
Tuesday, March 10, 2009
2 tons of ugly
Animal Facts
Scientific Name:Mola mola
Habitat:Open Waters
Animal Type:Fishes
Diet:Mainly jellies and other zooplankters, squid, fish, crustaceans, brittle stars
Size:to 14 feet and nearly 5,000 pounds; molas in Monterey Bay up to 1000 pounds or more
Range:Seasonally distributed in all tropical and temperate oceans
Interesting fact:Females of the species can produce more eggs than any other known vertebrate.
To view a live webcam of the sunfish in action, visit: www.montereybayaquarium.org
Fascinating Facts About Jellyfish, Part IV
Jellyfish fact: Different species of jellyfish can be found in all the worlds’ oceans. A type of jellyfish (that isn’t considered “true” jellyfish by science) can even be found in freshwater.
Jellyfish fact: A species of jellyfish, the Box jellyfish (sea wasp) kills more people than any other marine creature each year.
Jellyfish fact: The worlds largest known jellyfish can reach a diameter of 2.5 m / 8ft and its tentacles can grow to be half the length of a football field.
Jellyfish fact: Jellyfishes uses jet propulsion to make their way through to the oceans of the world. Some jellyfish are avid swimmers while other mostly drifts with the currents.
Jellyfish fact: Some species of jellyfish contains a lot of protein and are thought to be able to play a large role in ending hunger and malnutrition in poor areas around the world.
Jellyfish fact: Jellyfish are able to reproduce both sexually and asexually during different parts of their life cycle.
Monday, March 9, 2009
Ugly Gets Beautiful - Giant Jellyfish Swimming
Check out this video of a giant jellyfish gliding through the ocean:
Sunday, March 8, 2009
Fascinating Facts About Jellyfish, Part III
In the reproductive life cycle of a typical jellyfish, males release sperm and females release eggs into the water. When an egg and sperm fuse to form a fertilized egg during sexual reproduction, a larva develops that attaches to a rock or other object and develops into a polyp. In a type of asexual reproduction, the polyp transforms into a colony of polyps that resembles a stack of saucers. Each saucer in the stack detaches itself from the colony as a new medusa, and the reproductive cycle repeats.
Depending on the species, a jellyfish has a lifespan of one month to one year, very few live longer than a year.
Saturday, March 7, 2009
Fascinating Facts About Jellyfish, Part II
Jellyfish are about 98 percent water. If a jellyfish washes up on the beach, it will mostly disappear as the water evaporates. Most are transparent and bell-shaped. Their bodies have radial symmetry, which means that the body parts extend from a central point like the spokes on a wheel. If you cut a jellyfish in half at any point, you'll always get equal halves. Jellyfish have very simple bodies -- they don't have bones, a brain or a heart. To see light, detect smells and orient themselves, they have rudimentary sensory nerves at the base of their tentacles.
A jellyfish's body generally comprises six basic parts:
- The epidermis, which protects the inner organs
- The gastrodermis, which is the inner layer
- The mesoglea, or middle jelly, between the epidermis and gastrodermis
- The gastrovascular cavity, which functions as a gullet, stomach, and intestine all in one
- An orifice that functions as both the mouth and anus
- Tentacles that line the edge of the body
Friday, March 6, 2009
Fascinating Facts About Jellyfish, Part I
- Jellyfish don’t have any brain, heart, or bones. Some jellyfish have ways of detecting obstacles that can be compared to sight but they don’t have real eyes. It is a mystery how they can process the information from their “sight” since they doesn’t have any brain. They react directly on food and danger stimuli via nerve impulses without having any brain to process the impulses. Another fact about jellyfish and their bodies is that the body consists of over 95% water.
Yup, the jellyfish is ugly, brainless, and heartless. Ouch! - Jellyfish use tentacles with stinger cells to catch their prey, typically plankton and small fish. (The exact prey depends mainly on the size of the jellyfish.) The tentacles transport the prey they killed with their stingers to the mouth and the jellyfish promptly devours the animal. It is the same stinger cells that stings humans that ventures to close.
- Jellyfish are made up of an epidermis, gastrodermis and mesoglea. Jellyfish do not have a central nervous system,a circulatory system, respiratory system, or a osmoregulatory system. They have an incomplete digestive system and therefore use the same orifice for intake of food and expulsion of waste materials.
So basically, they poop out of their mouths. Ewwww... - Jellyfish go through several stages during their lifecycle and the form that you usually associate with jellyfish, medusas, is only one of them. There is for instance a phase called planula, where the jellyfish is in a type of larval stage. The planulae eventually attach themselves to surfaces where they become polyps which later turn into to medusas.
- Jellyfish swim by contracting and expanding their bodies. They do not have scales or shells. If exposed to the hot sun, they disappear, leaving only a circle of film. Jellyfish have a defense mechanism of oral arms or tentacles which are covered with organelles called nematocysts. These nematocysts are paired with a capsule which contains a coiled filament that stings. The filament unwinds and launches into the target, thereby injecting toxins upon contact by foreign bodies.
Stay tuned to Ugly Fish for more fascinating facts about Jellyfish!
Thursday, March 5, 2009
What is it about some things that attract us to them? Why I love jellyfish I'm not sure, but I'm completely fascinated by them. It's their otherworld beauty and the fact that I can't begin to understand how they exist. And honestly, I don't want to know - it would ruin their mystery. So today, I present just the jelly fish, no explanation necessary.
Monday, March 2, 2009
Ugly in a cute way - the Axolotl
Meet the Axolotl, also called the Mexican water dog. OK, not technically a fish, the Axolotl is actually a salamander of sorts. Axolotls are amphibians in the salamander family, and they are also neotenous meaning that unlike other salamanders they do not proceed to the adult developmental stage as they age. Instead they remain in the larval stage for their entire life where they retain their gills, reach sexual maturity, and grow up to 18 inches in size (most Axolotls are around nine inches). When introduced to hormones Axolotls may actually metamorphose into the lost adult stage where their coloring is more like that of other salamanders.
The Axolotl is also being widely studied for its healing abilities and the ability to regenerate limbs. It seems that there is a big fan base for this strange creature. To learn more about him, visit http://www.axolotl.org/
Sunday, March 1, 2009
Ugly and Deadly: The Piranha
A piranha or piraƱa is a member of a family of omnivorous freshwater fish which live in South American rivers. In Venezuelan rivers they are called caribes. They are known for their sharp teeth and a voracious appetite for meat.
Diet: Carnivore; mainly feeding on crabs, small fish, lizards, mammals and insects.
Size: 15-25 cm, although some have been reported up to 43 cm
Weight: Up to 5 lbs.
Appearance: Shimmery gold and dark olive green, with red under-belly. Most distinctive feature is their single row of sharp teeth in both jaws; the teeth are tightly packed and interlocking (via small cusps) and used for rapid puncture and shearing.
Did you know? Piranha bodies are covered in so many tastebuds that when something floats passed, they can tell if a creature is worth eating or not.