
Hagfish Day Expert Interview:
Jeff Drazen
and the Remarkable Rattail Fish
Photo:
©MBARI
| Hi Hagfish Day Fans, |
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We're excited to have one of our favorite biologists, Dr. Jeffrey Drazen from the University of Hawaii, join us again this year for Hagfish Day! Dr. Drazen is a deep-sea fish expert and part of his very cool career includes exploring the deep-sea in a submersible! Last year he shared his thoughts on the lovely hagfish and the barreleye. This year, he's back with another deep-sea beauty, the rattail fish. Who wouldn't love that face? Jeff, tell us more... |
|
Jake, the SeaDog |
PS. If you think the Rattail is the true beauty of Hagfish Day, vote for it in our Ugly-Beauty contest!
1. How many kinds of (deep-sea) rattails are there? Which is your favorite
species? Why?
There are about 400 species worldwide which is an amazing diversity. My favorite is probably the abyssal rattail (Coryphaenoides armatus). Its found worldwide from about 2000-4500m depth making it one of the most abundant fishes on the planet. Yet, much of its biology still remains a mystery. We have no idea when or where they reproduce. We have found no larvae. We do know now that they are big time scavengers eating lots of dead fish and squid that died in the surface and sank to the abyss.
2.
My what big eyes they have....why?
3. The rattail’s *pelvic
fins look longer than most fish...is there a reason? 4. Is it true that some rattails are big-time drummers? Can the deep-sea rattails drum, too? Yes! In many species the males have special muscles attached to their gas bladders (the drum). They use these to drum, making noises probably to communicate to their own kind. This would be a great way to communicate in the dark. 5. A rattail's tail doesn't look like a rat's tail to me. (Say that three times fast!) tail. So, what’s up with the name? A long time ago, scientists thought that the tail of these fish resembled a rat’s tail. This probably was in specimens captured in trawls so that all the scales were rubbed off. Their long tapering tails don’t allow for fantastic bursts of speed but they are very efficient slow swimmers. This is a big advantage for cruising in the darkness of the deep where food supply is really low. And, are they really called “grenadier” to make them more appetizing to people? Common names change. Fisheries began developing for these fish in the late 1970’s through to today. Nobody wants to eat a rattail. So they are now commonly called grenadiers. That sounds much more exotic and appetizing than rattail. 6. According to Monterey Bay Aquarium’s Seafood Watch, people shouldn’t eat grenadier....why not? (Forgot what a grenadier is? Read #5 again!) The large grenadiers that are commercially fished have a really slow pace of life and won’t be able to survive much fishing pressure. They have very low metabolisms and live a very long time -- 50 to 75 years. They also mature late which means the do not reproduce until they're somewhere between 10-20 years old! Grenadiers (rattails) also have have low numbers of offspring and probably only reproduce once every other year or so. All this information is important to understand because, the fisheries for grenadier/rattails are mostly principally trawl fisheries. Dragging a trawl net along the bottom of the ocean devastates the seafloor killing juveniles and adults alike. |
7. Is
there a safe way to fish for rattails (grenadier)? 8.
Two of our other Hagfish Day, the hairy vent snail
and black snail, live in deep-sea vents. Would a ratfish ever run across
them in its travels? 9 . Why is the rattail important to its environment?![]() These fishes are relatively abundant, very diverse and often amongst the top predators in the deep-sea, the largest ecosystem on our planet. Can you imagine understanding how the African plains ecosystem worked without knowing anything about lions, cheetahs or hyenas? 10. Can people....okay deep-sea scientists...observe them in person on a deep-sea sub or do they live too deep or are they shy? We frequently see rattails from the sub.
They aren’t very fast swimmers. You can see how close from
the photos (on this page) of rattails taken from the sub. Some species do seem to avoid lights (shallower living ones) and others seem attracted to disturbance. In one experiment I was involved with off Monterey we had rattails swimming around the area the whole time we were taking sediment cores, or moving instruments about. We actually bumped into a few of them before they swam off. 10. What don’t you know about rattails but hope to learn in your research? There is a lot we don’t know about rattails. Some of my current research is aimed at understanding their metabolism and growth. We know these things are very low in some species but with such a great diversity we don’t know how general this pattern is. Finding out is really important because a slow pace of life means that they are very susceptible to fishing and to climate change. (see #6 and 7)
Another of my science goal’s is to understand life in the oceans deepest places, the ocean trenches. Rattails are some of the deepest living fishes in the world. They live just over 22,967 ft (7000 m) down! Why aren’t they found even deeper? This may have to do with food supply or with adaptations to crushing pressure.
11. Do rattails
have any adaptations or behaviors as awesomely cool as a hagfish’s?
(though having taste buds on their pelvic fins is pretty cool!
(See #3) Thank you Jeff for your time, information and sense of humor!
|
Thank you Jeff!
You've helped us learn more about the remarkable rattail...and once again, helped us celebrate Hagfish Day!Cool links:
Dr. Drazen's Deep-sea Fishes page Papahanaumokuakea Marine National Monument
Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute (MBARI)
Inspired by Hagfish? Vote for your favorite Ugly-Beauty or write a Hagfish Haiku....the links are below:
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