Ecology and behaviour
- Related Topics:
- anglerfish
- toadfish
- Polymixiiformes
- Gadiformes
- ophidiiform
All batrachoidiforms are bottom dwellers. True toadfishes (Batrachoidinae, about 52 species) occur in shallow or moderate depths along continental coasts; some ascend rivers. The oyster toadfish lives under rocks or amid debris, awaiting prey of almost any type, which is taken with a sudden snap. Venomous toadfishes (Thalassophryninae, about 11 species) are restricted to the coasts and rivers of Central and South America. Because of their sluggish habits, these fishes are sometimes stepped on by people and can inflict painful wounds. Midshipmen (Porichthyinae, about 15 species), which are restricted to tropical and temperate coasts of the Americas, are unusual in being shallow-water fishes with photophores, a feature generally found in deepwater forms. Most midshipmen occur at depths of less than 50 fathoms (1 fathom equals 6 feet), and all are found in water shallower than 200 fathoms.
Gadiform fishes of the family Gadidae (about 70 species) are all marine species, except for the burbot (Lota lota); some, however, ascend rivers with the tides. Bottom dwellers, they occur on the continental shelves from shallow water to about 200 fathoms and, although distributed throughout the oceans, are most numerous in the eastern North Atlantic. Deep-sea cods (Moridae, about 105 species) are cold-water bottom fishes, living at greater depths along the continental slopes. Grenadiers (Macrouridae, about 350 species), typically bottom fishes, live along the continental slopes at depths of 100 to 1,000 fathoms. Few species are cosmopolitan in distribution, but the group as a whole is widely distributed in tropical and temperate latitudes. Four species of eel cods (Muraenolepididae) are confined to Antarctic seas, and, like the cods, they are bottom fishes, living at moderate depths.
In ophidiiforms, the pearlfishes (Carapidae, about 31 species) are marine, mainly tropical, shallow-water eel-like fishes adapted to living inside the body of various invertebrates. They have been collected from a variety of hosts, including tunicates, oysters, and sea cucumbers. Brotulas and cusk eels (Ophidiidae, about 250 species) are mainly bottom dwellers. Some are shallow-water species with nocturnal habits, but the group as a whole is the dominant family of teleosts at depths greater than 2,000 fathoms. Some have been taken at depths of about 4,000 fathoms, the greatest depth at which any form of fish life is known.
Of the lophiiforms, the ceratioids, or deep-sea anglerfishes, are the only abyssal (deep-sea) forms. They occur primarily at depths of 1,000 to 3,000 fathoms. Unlike other lophiiforms, they are midwater fishes, are uniformly black, and have no pelvic fins. They are apparently feeble swimmers, depending primarily on their light organs to attract prey. Some (Melanocetus, Linophryne) are known to swallow fishes several times their own length, accommodating them in a highly distensible stomach. Crustaceans and other invertebrates are also eaten. In addition, the so-called frogfishes (Antennariidae, about 42 species) are shallow-water forms that commonly inhabit coral reefs. Frogfishes typically have highly varied colour patterns, and some species are able to change colours. In habit they are sedentary but can use their fins to walk on the bottom and to climb over obstacles. The tropical sargassum fish (Histrio histrio), so called because it lives amid floating brown algae of the genus Sargassum, clings to the branches of algae with prehensile pectoral fins as it searches for prey, which is sucked into the mouth by powerful jaws and expandable cheeks.
The lophiiform group known as goosefishes (Lophiidae, about 25 species) seldom occurs in shallow water, preferring instead the moderate depths (10 to 500 fathoms) along the continental slopes of tropical and temperate regions. The batfishes (Ogcocephalidae, about 60 species) are mainly deepwater lophiiforms, but some (Ogcocephalus, Halieutichthys) are regularly found in water only a few feet deep. Like frogfishes, they walk on the bottom using their pectoral fins. Batfishes are awkward swimmers and, when disturbed, tend to bury themselves in the bottom rather than swim away.
Percopsiforms (about nine species) may live under conditions of dim light. Cave fishes, with eyes reduced to nonfunctional rudiments, have elaborate systems of sense organs in the skin of the head, body, and tail; they live in total darkness. Because of the secretive habits of percopsiforms, little is known about species other than the trout-perch (Percopsis omiscomaycus), which is widely distributed in central North America and is abundant in some of the Great Lakes, where it occurs in clear water to a depth of about 35 fathoms.
Form and function
Batrachoidiforms generally have two dorsal fins: a small anterior fin, usually with two spines, and a long posterior fin. In venomous species the hollow fin spines form an efficient apparatus for the injection of venom. A similar spine is found on each cheek (operculum).
Among the gadiforms, the dorsal and anal fins of some deep-sea cods are distinctively arranged as three dorsals and two anals. This arrangement also occurs in some codfishes (Gadidae). The macrourids are characterized by a long, tapering tail. A tubular light organ containing luminescent bacteria is sometimes present along the ventral midline of both sexes. All but a few species of macrourids have a well-developed swim bladder; in the males of some species and in some codfishes the swim bladder is equipped with drumming muscles, indicating that sound can be produced. In the bregmacerotids and muraenolepidids there are two dorsal fins, with the anterior fin represented by a single ray. Brotulas may have the pelvic fins either present or absent, but cusk eels have them anterior in position, under the lower jaw. The pelvic fins of both types, kept in continuous probing motion as the fish swims just off the bottom, aid in detecting food.
Some lophiiforms are unique among teleostean fishes in having only two gills. The ogcocephalids are somewhat flattened anglers, in this respect resembling lophiids rather than the balloonlike antennariids; they are distinctive in having the illicium, when not in use, concealed in a tube (illicial cavity) between the eyes and over the mouth. Like most anglerfishes, they lack typical scales but are distinctively equipped with bony tubercles (projections) and spines imbedded in their skin.