tripod fish | Deep Sea News https://deepseanews.com All the news on the Earth's largest environment. Fri, 16 Jun 2017 02:34:02 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://csrtech.com The Fantastical Beasts of the Deep Gulf of Mexico https://deepseanews.com/2017/06/the-fantastical-beasts-of-the-deep-gulf-of-mexico/ Fri, 16 Jun 2017 02:17:40 +0000 https://www.deepseanews.com/?p=58206 I recently returned from nearly two weeks at sea with a motley and intrepid crew exploring the Gulf of Mexico almost a mile and half…

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I recently returned from nearly two weeks at sea with a motley and intrepid crew exploring the Gulf of Mexico almost a mile and half deep.  You can read up on our adventures on our Reddit AMA. The main goal was to deploy nearly 200 wood falls on the deep-sea floor.  The work, funded by the National Science Foundation, seeks to examine how marine organisms respond to changing food supplies as a result of climate change.  Wood falls in the deep sea offer up nice little experimental systems in which to test ideas.  The work was conducted with a remote operated vehicle and allowed us the opportunity to explore the amazing creatures found in the deep Gulf of Mexico.  Below is both an amazing set of photos taken on the surface by the talented photographer Jason Bradley, part of the expedition, and a host photos taken by the scientists and ROV team with the 4K camera aboard Oceaneering’s Global Explorer.

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The Fish That Walks on Stilts https://deepseanews.com/2010/08/the-fish-that-walks-on-stilts/ https://deepseanews.com/2010/08/the-fish-that-walks-on-stilts/#comments Fri, 27 Aug 2010 02:54:34 +0000 https://www.deepseanews.com/?p=9984 One of the denizens of the deep is the 30cm long tripod fish, Bathypterois grallator.  This unusual fish is typically found anywhere between 1-5km deep…

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One of the denizens of the deep is the 30cm long tripod fish, Bathypterois grallator.  This unusual fish is typically found anywhere between 1-5km deep in the Atlantic, eastern Pacific, and western Indian, although future exploration wil likely reveal that is global.  First described over a century ago in 1886, the common name comes from the modified pelvic and lower caudal fins that are elongated.  Although rigid on the seafloor, the video above demonstrates these fins can be quite flexible while swimming.  The scientific name comes from the Greek bathus meaning deep, Greek pterois meaning feathery referring to the spines of a fish, and the Latin grallator, one who walks on stilts.

The video also shows that on these modified finds the tripod fish can stand on the seafloor.  The tripod allows the fish actually to place itself up off the bottom.  The need for this stems from the fact that currents centimeters near the bottom are slow to nonexistent.  This layer called the benthic boundary layer is not the ideal place to wait for food.  This is the same reason why you often see filter feeding seastars, basketstars, and brittlestar, among many other organisms, climb high on corals and sponges.

It is hypothesized that the fish uses the elongated pectoral fins, seen in the below video extending above the head, to detect small crustaceans coming in as the fish faces into the current. These elongated pectoral fins also are thought to direct the crustaceans toward the mouth.

Another interesting tidbit about this species…its a simultaneous hermaphrodite.

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