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The roughhead grenadier is found in the North Atlantic Ocean at depths between 200 and 2,000 metres (660 and 6,560 ft) and water temperatures below 5.4 °C (41.7 °F). [4]
They are found at depths from around 200 meters (660 feet) to greater than 3,000 meters (9,800 feet). They normally prefer temperatures of between 1 and 4 °C (34 and 39 °F), although one species, the Antarctic roughhead (Macrourus whitsoni), has been collected at temperatures which were slightly below 0 °C (32 °F). [1]
The roughnose grenadier is benthopelagic, living at depths of 500–1,630 m (1,640–5,350 ft) in the North Atlantic Ocean and Southwest Pacific. [7] Behaviour
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The ridge scaled rattail [2] or ridge-scaled grenadier, [3] Macrourus carinatus, is a species of deep-water fish in the family Macrouridae. [1] [2] It has southern circumglobal distribution in temperate to subantarctic waters (34°S–65°S) and is found in the Southern Atlantic, Indian and Pacific Oceans and in the Southern Ocean [1] [2] at depths of about 200–1,200 m (660–3,940 ft).
The roundnose grenadier is a batch spawner [3] and is believed to migrate to the vicinity of Iceland to spawn in late summer or autumn. [4] The females reach maturity when they are nine to eleven years old and the males when they are rather younger. [6] Up to 35,000 eggs can be produced at a time. [4]
The Bridge Fire burns the mountain communities to the northeast of Los Angeles, in Wrightwood, California, U.S. September 11, 2024.
Ventrifossa macropogon N. B. Marshall, 1973 (Longbeard grenadier) Ventrifossa macroptera Okamura, 1982 (Palau grenadier) [2] Ventrifossa misakia (D. S. Jordan & C. H. Gilbert, 1904) (Misaki grenadier) [2] Ventrifossa mucocephalus N. B. Marshall, 1973 (Slimehead grenadier) Ventrifossa mystax Iwamoto & M. E. Anderson, 1994