Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
A viperfish is any species of marine fish in the genus Chauliodus. Viperfishes are mostly found in the mesopelagic zone and are characterized by long, needle-like teeth and hinged lower jaws. A typical viperfish grows to lengths of 30 cm (12 in).
Known for its fang-like teeth and bioluminescent lure, the Viperfish (genus Chauliodus) thrives in the deep-sea, adapting to Earth's extremes. One of the most unusual-looking fish that live in the extreme depths of the oceans is the Viperfish.
Meet the Pacific viperfish. A viperfish traps small fish and shrimp in its big mouth. Its long, sharp teeth form a cage to keep food from swimming back out. Animal type. Fishes. Habitat. Deep sea. Size. Up to 12 inches (30 cm) total length.
Sloane's viperfish, Chauliodus sloani, is a predatory mesopelagic dragonfish found in waters across the world. The species was first described by German scientists Marcus Elieser Bloch and Johann Gottlob Schneider in their 1801 book Systema ichthyologiae: iconibus CX illustratum, volume 1.
Sloane's Viperfish is one of the most recognizable deep sea fishes with its long fang-like teeth and photophores illuminating the side of its body.
The viperfish is a highly specialized deep-sea predator and is found all over the world’s oceans. Most of these creepy-looking fish almost never come to the surface of the ocean and stay several hundred or thousands of feet below the surface.
The Pacific viperfish, Chauliodus macouni, is a predatory deep-sea fish found in the North Pacific. It is reported as being either mesopelagic or bathypelagic, with diel vertical migration to shallower waters.
The viperfish, also known scientifically as Chauliodus sloani, is one of the fiercest predators of the deep. This fish can be easily recognized by its large mouth and sharp, fang-like teeth.
Viperfish, any of nine species of marine fishes belonging to the genus Chauliodus (order Stomiiformes). They are found in tropical regions of the major oceans. The viperfishes are deep-sea dwellers and have luminescent organs along the sides; the lights sometimes function in the attraction of other.
Sloane's viperfish, Chauliodus sloani, is a predatory mesopelagic dragonfish found in waters across the world. [3] The species was first described by German scientists Marcus Elieser Bloch and Johann Gottlob Schneider in their 1801 book Systema ichthyologiae: iconibus CX illustratum, volume 1. [4]