Anotopterus nikparini
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North Pacific daggertooth | ||||||||||||||
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NE
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Binomial name | ||||||||||||||
Anotopterus nikparini Kukuev, 1998 |
The North Pacific daggertooth, Anotopterus nikparini, is a daggertooth in the family Anotopteridae. It is found off the Pacific Coast of British Columbia, Canada[1], above latitude 25°N, to depths up to and exceeding 2,000 m.
The North Pacific daggertooth is an extremely elongate scaleless fish. Large adults have a pair of dermal keels midlaterally on each side. There is a small, flexible projection at the tip of the lower jaw, and there is no rayed dorsal fin.
North Pacific daggertooth are found in a wide range of depths, sometimes near the surface to below 2,000 m. Larger adults inhabit colder water toward the poles, whereas the young and smaller adults inhabit more temperate regions. They feed on molluscs, crustaceans, marine worms, coelenterates, salps, and fishes. The distensible body wall and large stomach can accommodate prey up to half of its own length. Reproduction is oviparous, with planktonic larvae. They are preyed upon by albacore, Pacific lancetfish, halibut, steelhead salmon, blue shark, pomfret, and whales.
[edit] References
- "Anotopterus nikparini". FishBase. Ed. Ranier Froese and Daniel Pauly. May 2006 version. N.p.: FishBase, 2006.
- BOLD