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  2. Mormyridae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mormyridae

    Mormyromast, a type of electroreceptor found only in mormyrid fishes Further information: Electroreception and electrogenesis Elephantfish possess electric organs that generate weak electric fields , and electroreceptors ( ampullae of Lorenzini , knollenorgans , and Mormyromasts) that detect small variations in these electric fields caused by ...

  3. Mormyroidea - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mormyroidea

    Mormyromast, a type of electroreceptor found only in the skin of Mormyrid fishes These fish have two types of tuberous electroreceptor: [ note 2 ] the Knollenorgan [ 43 ] and the Mormyromast . [ 44 ] [ 45 ] Both organs are found in adult individuals, where they are lightly covered by epithelial cells and skin, while their sensitivity ranges ...

  4. Fish intelligence - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fish_intelligence

    Fish intelligence is "the resultant of the process of acquiring, storing in memory, ... In mormyrid fish (a family of weakly electrosensitive freshwater fish), ...

  5. Mormyrinae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mormyrinae

    The subfamily Mormyrinae contains all but one of the genera of the African freshwater fish family Mormyridae in the order Osteoglossiformes.They are often called elephantfish due to a long protrusion below their mouths used to detect buried invertebrates that is suggestive of a tusk or trunk (some such as Marcusenius senegalensis gracilis are sometimes called trunkfish though this term is ...

  6. Mormyrus longirostris - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mormyrus_longirostris

    Mormyrus longirostris, commonly referred as the eastern bottle-nosed mormyrid, is a medium-sized ray-finned fish species belonging to the family Mormyridae.It was originally described by Wilhelm Peters in Monatsberichte der Akad. Wiss. Berlin, 1852.

  7. Blunt-jawed elephantnose - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blunt-jawed_elephantnose

    The blunt-jawed elephantnose or wormjawed mormyrid (Campylomormyrus tamandua) is a species of elephantfish. [2] It is found in rivers in West and Middle Africa. [3] It is brown or black with a long elephant-like snout with the mouth located near the tip. Its diet consists of worms, fish, and insects.

  8. Mormyrus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mormyrus

    Bronze figurine of Oxyrhynchus fish, Late Period-Ptolemaic Egypt The Medjed was a sacred fish in Ancient Egypt. At the city of Per-Medjed, better known as Oxyrhynchus, whose name means "sharp-nosed" after the fish, archaeologists have found fishes depicted as bronze figurines, mural paintings, or wooden coffins in the shape of fishes with downturned snouts, with horned sun-disc crowns like ...

  9. Peters's elephantnose fish - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peters's_elephantnose_fish

    Peters's elephant-nose fish (Gnathonemus petersii) is an African freshwater elephantfish in the genus Gnathonemus. Other names in English include elephantnose fish, long-nosed elephant fish, and Ubangi mormyrid, after the Ubangi River. The Latin name petersii is probably for the German naturalist Wilhelm Peters.