Bathypelagic zone Flashcards
Describe the Bathypelagic zone
1000m->3000m
There is no light
Plankton biomass is 1% of surface at 1000m and 0.01% of surface at 5000m
Describe Bathypelagic (abyssal) fish
150 species at 1000 - 3000m
-includes 100 species of angler fish.
Reduced calcification
-except jaws and teeth
Watery muscles
-Angler fish and Gulper eels are 95% water
Feeding
- Large teeth
- Huge mouths
- distensible guts and body walls
Give some examples of bathypelagic fish
- Lantern fish
- Hatchet fish
- Gulper eel
- Cyclothone
- Anglerfish
- Gigantactis
The Fangtooth - 16cm long but has proportiantely the largest teeth of any fish. Lives at 2000 - 5000m - the deepest living fish ever discovered.
Six-gilled sharks can grow to 4.8m. They cruise the ocean floor during the day down to 2,500m. They move to the surface at night to feed.
The frilled shark - rarely seen. It’s a living fossil found at around 1,500m
What are some of the reproductive strategies of mesopelagic fish?
- Few large eggs
- Viviparity (live births)
- reduced skeletal and muscular systems saves energy for eggs
- mouth broodinig (retain eggs inside mouth for protection)
- dwarf parasitic male (as seen in the Angler fish, Linophryne)
- bioluminescence to attract and signal opposite sex.
- Vampire squid live in mesopelagic and bethypelagic regions at 3000m. Proportionally they have the largest eyes of any animal.
What are some of the light adaptations of mesopelagic fish
- transparent eyeballs ensure maximum amount of light is captured.
- Large pupils like in the viperfish capture maximum available light.
- Tubular eyes point upwards as seen in the Hatchet fish.