enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Anglerfish - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anglerfish

    The name "anglerfish" derives from the species' characteristic method of predation. Anglerfish typically have at least one long filament sprouting from the middle of their heads, termed the illicium. The illicium is the detached and modified first three spines of the anterior dorsal fin. In most anglerfish species, the longest filament is the ...

  3. Humpback anglerfish - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Humpback_anglerfish

    Günther, 1864. The humpback anglerfish (Melanocetus johnsonii) is a species of black seadevil in the family of Melanocetidae, which means "black whale" in Greek. [1] The species is named after James Yate Johnson, the English naturalist who discovered the first specimen in Madeira in 1863. [2] The common names include anglerfish, viperfish and ...

  4. Black seadevil - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_seadevil

    The black seadevil family, Melanocetidae, was first proposed as a subfamily in 1878 by the American biologist Theodore Gill. [2] The only genus in the family is Melanocetus which was proposed as a monospecific genus in 1864 by the German-born British herpetologist and ichthyologist Albert Günther when he described the humpback anglerfish (M. johnsoni). [3]

  5. Sargassum fish - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sargassum_fish

    The sargassum fish, anglerfish, or frog fish (Histrio histrio) [4] is a species of marine ray-finned fish belonging to the family Antennariidae, the frogfishes, the only species in the genus Histrio. It lives among Sargassum seaweed which floats in subtropical oceans. [5] The scientific name comes from the Latin histrio meaning a stage player ...

  6. Lophius - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lophius

    Lophius. Members of the genus Lophius, also sometimes called monkfish, fishing-frogs, frog-fish, and sea-devils, are various species of lophiid anglerfishes found in the Atlantic and Indian Oceans. Lophius is known as the "monk" or "monkfish" to the North Sea and North Atlantic fishermen, a name which also belongs to Squatina squatina, the ...

  7. Deep-sea fish - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deep-sea_fish

    The deep-sea angler fish in particular has a long fishing-rod-like adaptation protruding from its face, on the end of which is a bioluminescent piece of skin that wriggles like a worm to lure its prey. Some must consume other fish that are the same size or larger than them and they need adaptations to help digest them efficiently.

  8. Goosefish - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Goosefish

    The largest species in the family is the angler (Lophius piscatorius) which has a maximum published standard length of 200 cm (79 in) while the smallest is Lophiodes fimbriatus with a maximum published standard length of 7.5 cm (3.0 in). [13] American angler (Lophius americanus) at the New England Aquarium

  9. Ceratioidei - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ceratioidei

    see text. Ceratioidei, the deep-sea anglerfishes or pelagic anglerfishes, is a suborder of marine ray-finned fishes, one of four suborders in the order Lophiiformes, the anglerfishes. These fishes are found in tropical and temperate seas throughout the world. One of the better known traits of the deep-sea anglerfishes is their extreme sexual ...