'Deep sea fish' is a term for
fish that live below the
photic zone of the ocean. Examples include the
lanternfish,
flashlight fish,
cookiecutter shark,
bristlemouths, and
anglerfish.
Environment
Because the photic level zone lies only a few hundred meters below the water, about 90% of the ocean volume is invisible to humans. The deep sea is also an extremely hostile environment, with pressures between 20 and 1,000
atmospheres (between 2 and 100
megapascals), temperatures between 3 and 10 degrees
Celsius, and a lack of oxygen. The fish that have evolved to this harsh environment are not capable of surviving in laboratory conditions, and any attempts to keep them in captivity have led to their deaths. For this reason little is known about them, as there are limitations to the amount of fruitful research that can be carried out on a dead specimen and deep sea exploratory equipment is very expensive. As such, many species are known only to
scientists and have therefore retained their scientific names.
Characteristics

California headlight fish
The fish of the deep sea are among the most elusive and unusual looking creatures on Earth. In this deep unknown lie many unusual creatures we still have yet to study. Since many of these fish live in regions where there is no natural
illumination, they cannot rely solely on their eyesight for locating prey and mates and avoiding predators; deep sea fish have
evolved appropriately to the extreme sub-photic region in which they live. Many deep sea fish are
bioluminescent, with extremely large eyes adapted to the dark. Some have long feelers to help them locate prey or attract mates in the pitch dark of the deep ocean. The deep sea angler fish in particular has a long fishing-rod-like adaptation protruding from its face, on the end of which is a bioluminescent piece of skin that wriggles like a worm to lure its prey. The lifecycle of deep sea fish can be exclusively deep water although some species are born in shallower water and sink on becoming adults.
Due to the poor level of
photosynthetic light reaching deep sea environments, most fish need to rely on
organic matter sinking from higher levels, or, in rare cases,
hydrothermal vents for nutrients. This makes the deep sea much poorer in productivity than shallower regions. Consequently many species of deep sea fish are noticeably smaller and have larger mouths and guts than those living at shallower depths. It has also been found that the deeper a fish lives, the more jelly-like its flesh and the more minimal its bone structure. This makes them slower and less agile than surface fish.
Endangered Species
A recent study by
Canadian scientists, has found five species of deep sea fish – roundnose grenadier, onion-eye grenadier, blue hake, spiny eel and spinytail skate – to be on the verge of extinction due to the shift of
commercial fishing from
continental shelves to the slopes of the continental shelves, down to depths of 1600 meters. The slow reproduction of these fish – they reach
sexual maturity at about the same age as
human beings – is one of the main reasons that they cannot recover from the excessive fishing.
[1]
Reference
1. Jennifer A. Devine, Krista D. Baker and Richard L. Haedrich; "Fisheries: Deep-sea fishes qualify as endangered" in ''Nature'', vol 439, p. 29
External links
#
Everything you wanted to know about the deep sea — Provided by ''
New Scientist''.
# Nybakken, James.
The New Grolliers Multimedia Encyclopedia. Release 6, 1993.
# http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/abyss/life/bestiary.html