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  2. Hagfish - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hagfish

    The inshore hagfish, found in the northwest Pacific, is eaten in Japan [70] and South Korea. As hagfish slime binds vast amounts of liquid even at low temperatures, it was proposed as an energy-saving alternative for the production of tofu that does not require heating. [71]

  3. Inshore hagfish - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inshore_hagfish

    The inshore hagfish (Eptatretus burgeri) is a hagfish found in the Northwest Pacific, from the Sea of Japan and across eastern Japan to Taiwan. It has six pairs of gill pouches and gill apertures. [4] These hagfish are found in the sublittoral zone. They live usually buried in the bottom mud and migrate into deeper water to spawn.

  4. Myxine glutinosa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Myxine_glutinosa

    The Atlantic hagfish may grow up to .75 metres (2 + 1 ⁄ 2 ft) long, with no eyes and no jaws; its star-shaped mouth is surrounded by 6 mouth barbels. [3] Their eyes also lack a lens and pigment (features found in the eyes of all other living vertebrates. [4] There is a single gill slit on each side of the eel-like body. [3]

  5. Pacific hagfish - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pacific_hagfish

    The Pacific hagfish employs an anguilliform swimming mode, as it has an elongate, eel-like body plan. A study found that both E. stoutii, and Myxine glutinosa (Atlantic hagfish) utilize high amplitude, undulatory waves to swim. This means that hagfish pass a wave down the length of their body which propels them forward, beginning at their head.

  6. Broadgilled hagfish - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Broadgilled_hagfish

    1920s illustration of the body and mouth by Louis Thomas Griffin. The broadgilled hagfish or New Zealand hagfish (Eptatretus cirrhatus), also known by its Māori language name tuere, is a hagfish found around New Zealand and the Chatham Islands as well as around the south and east coasts of Australia, at depths between 1 and 900 metres.

  7. Eptatretus deani - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eptatretus_deani

    Eptatretus deani, the black hagfish, is a species of hagfish. Common to other species of hagfish, their unusual feeding habits and slime -producing capabilities have led members of the scientific and popular media to dub the hagfish as the most "disgusting" of all sea creatures.

  8. Myxine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Myxine

    Southern hagfish (Myxine australis) mid-19th century drawing by Günther. Myxine / m ɪ k ˈ s aɪ n iː / is a genus of hagfish, from the Greek μυξῖνος (myxinos, "slimy").It is the type genus of the class Myxini.

  9. Southern hagfish - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Southern_hagfish

    The southern hagfish is found in the cold waters of the Southwestern Atlantic Ocean from the coasts off Southwestern Brazil down to the Southern Ocean and the Tierra del Fuego and the Patagonian coasts of Chile and Argentina, including the Strait of Magellan. [5] It lives hidden in the mud in relatively shallow water, between 10 and 100 metres.