Deep-spied Fish: Atlantic expeditions uncover secret sex life of deep-sea nomads 
US Source: Underwatertimes 2/21/2006

For centuries scientists have thought of deep-sea pelagic fish as nomadic wanderers, in part because information about them was so limited. However, new results from the ongoing Mid-Atlantic Ridge Ecosystems program (MAR-ECO), a Sloan Foundation-sponsored component of the Census of Marine Life, have revealed that these fishes may in fact be gathering at features such as ridges or seamounts to spawn. The research has important implications for how deep-sea ecosystems should be managed to prevent devastation by deep trawling activities. MAR-ECO research expeditions have also led to the discovery of as many as six fish species new to science and the collection of some unusually large deep-sea fish specimens.
 

"We're discovering all these patterns that we've never seen before," says Sutton, "and now we're working to figure out what they mean and how they got there. The Mid-Atlantic Ridge is proving to be an oasis in the desert , so to speak."

Pelagic fish are those species thought to spend the bulk of their time in open water, as opposed to staying near the seafloor. Classification has historically been determined based mainly on whether the fish are typically caught in open water trawl nets, or trawl gear that collects along the bottom. Deepwater pelagics include some of what most people would agree to be the most bizarre looking animals on the planet. Many, with their oversized fangs, aquatic scowls, and ingenious entrapment devices-- coupled with names such as "vampire fish from hell" and saber-toothed viper fish--are the stuff of pure nightmare save for their typically small sizes. Like the best nightmare sponsors, though, they remain mysterious.

 
Continue...

News Id SourceStampcountry
1801По чудесному льду...ohotniki2023-03-24RU
1802Minnesota catch-and-release northern pike recordechopress2023-03-14US
18031954 article puts then-lowly status of burbot on Lake of the Woods into clear focusechopress2023-03-25US
1804Summer 2022 creel survey shows decline in Red River fishing pressureechopress2023-03-25US
1805Much of drought-plagued West Coast faces salmon fishing banfoxnews2023-03-24US
1806Colorado fishermen ordered to pay over $1K each after catching 463 pounds of Michigan fishFox News2023-03-24US
1807A Fish Can Sense Another's Fear, a Study ShowsAssociated Press2023-03-23PT
1808На открытую воду в оттепельohotniki2023-03-23RU
1809Japan, 8 other economies agree to slash saury fishing quota by 25%Mainichi Japan2023-03-24JP
1810Much of drought-plagued U.S. West Coast faces salmon fishing banvancouversun2023-03-24US
1811Wisconsin man ties Minnesota catch-and-release northern pike recordechopress2023-03-14US
1812Expert on Minnesota lakes: Expect late ice-out this yearechopress2023-03-14US
1813Frisch: A One-Two Punch for Walleyesechopress2023-03-16US
1814Crappie resurgence offers bonus winter action on Upper Red Lakeechopress2023-03-17US
181530 invasive carp caught in Mississippi near Winonaechopress2023-03-23US
1816Fort Myers Beach removes 10 tons of dead fish from beachesFort Myers News-Press2023-03-07US
1817Spearfisherman snags 177-pound monster, then has to get it out of ice-covered lakethestate2023-02-15US
1818Angler reels in record-breaking fish — and she’s just 5 years old, Idaho officials saythestate2023-03-08US
1819Nigeria's cage-based tilapia championthefishsite2023-03-08NG
1820One of North America’s most dangerous invasive species is hitchhiking on fishscience2023-03-10US
1821Anglerfish, the amazing sexual parasites of the abysselpais2023-03-07IS
1822Plastic pollution is filtering up into the fish that we eatsalon2023-03-08US
1823Federal infrastructure funds could be a boon for fish passagesouthernmarylandchronicle2023-03-11US
1824British angler hooks humongous 222lb catfish which dragged his boatdailymail2023-03-10UK
1825Scots teen reels in two fish three times his weightdailyrecord2023-03-12UK

214 215 216 72 of [217 - pages.]