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HAGFISH

:''This article is about the hagfish. For the Punk Rock band, see Hagfish (band).''
'Hagfish' are marine craniates of the class 'Myxini', also known as 'Hyperotreti'. Despite their name, there is some debate about whether they are strictly fish (as there is for lampreys), since they belong to a much more primitive lineage than any other group that is commonly defined fish (Chondrichthyes and Osteichthyes). Their unusual feeding habits and slime-producing capabilities have led members of the scientific and popular media to dub the hagfish as the most "disgusting" of all sea creatures.[1][2][3]
Hagfish are long, vermiform and can exude copious quantities of a sticky slime or mucus (from which the typical species ''Myxine glutinosa'' was named). When captured and held by the tail, they escape by secreting the fibrous slime, which turns into a thick and sticky gel when combined with water, and then cleaning off by tying themselves in an overhand knot which works its way from the head to the tail of the animal, scraping off the slime as it goes. Some authorities conjecture that this singular behavior may assist them in extricating themselves from the jaws of predatory fish. However, the "sliming" also seems to act as a distraction to predators, and free-swimming hagfish are seen to "slime" when agitated and will later clear the mucus off by way of the same travelling-knot behavior.
Hagfish have elongated, 'eel-like' bodies, and paddle-like tails. Colours depend on the species, ranging from pink to blue-grey, and may have black or white mottling. Eyes may be vestigial or absent. The hagfish has no true fins or jaws, and has six barbels around its mouth and a single nostril. Instead of vertically articulating jaws like Gnathostomata (vertebrates with jaws), they have a pair of horizontally moving structures with toothlike projections for pulling off food. There are typically short tentacle-like protrusions around the mouth.
Hagfish enter both living and dead fish, feeding on the insides (polychaete marine worms are also prey). While having no ability to enter through skin, they will often enter through current openings such as the mouth, gills or anus. They tend to be quite common in their range, sometimes becoming a nuisance to fishermen by devouring the catch before it can be pulled to the surface. Not unlike leeches, they have a sluggish metabolism and can go months between feedings.
Hagfish average about half a metre (18 inches) in length; ''Eptatretus goliath'' is the largest known, with a specimen recorded at 127 cm, while ''Myxine kuoi'' and ''Myxine pequenoi'' seem to reach no more than 18 cm. An adult hagfish can secrete enough slime to turn a large bucket of water into gel in a matter of minutes.
There has been long discussion in scientific literature about the hagfish being non-vertebrate. Given their classification as Agnatha, Hagfish are seen as an elementary vertebrate in between Prevertebrate and Gnathostome. Thus, their classification is as an extremely primitive Vertebrate.

★ They are part of the subphylum ''Vertebrata'' so, taxonomically speaking, they are vertebrates.

★ They do not have vertebrae so, anatomically, they're not vertebrates.
Recent molecular biology analysis tend to classify hagfish as vertebrates (see references), their molecular evolutive distance from ''Vertebrata (sensu stricto)'' being short. A single fossil of hagfish shows that there has been little evolutionary change in the last 300 million years. [4]
The circulatory system of the hagfish has both closed and open blood vessels, with a heart system that is the most primitive of all vertebrates, bearing some resemblance to that of some worms. This system comprises a "brachial heart", which functions as the main pump, and three types of accessory hearts: the "portal" heart(s) which carry blood from intestines to liver; the "cardinal" heart(s) which move blood from the head to the body, and the "caudal" heart(s) which pump blood from the trunk and kidneys to the body. None of these hearts are innervated, so their function is probably modulated, if at all, by hormones.
Very little is known about Hagfish reproduction. In some species, sex ratio can be as high as 100:1 in favour of females. In other species, individual hagfish which are hermaphroditic, with both ovaries and testes, but the female gonads remain non-functional until the individual has reached a particular stage in the hagfish lifecycle, are not uncommon. Females typically lay 20-30 yolky eggs, that tend to aggregate due to the presence of Velcro-like tufts at either end. Hagfish do not have a larval stage, in contrast to lampreys, which have a long larval phase.
Hagfish are eaten in Japan and South Korea, and their skin is made into "eel leather" (used for so-called "eelskin" products ) in Korea.
In recent years hagfish have become of special interest for genetic analysis investigating the relationships among chordates. It has also recently been discovered that the mucus excreted by the hagfish is unique in that it includes strong, threadlike fibres similar to spider silk. What is interesting about hagfish slime is that it is fibre-reinforced. No other slime secretion known is reinforced with fibres in the way Hagfish slime is. The fibres are about as fine as spider silk (averaging two micrometres), but can be twelve centimetres long. When the coiled fibres leave the Hagfishes' 'slime' gland, they unravel quickly to their full length without tangling. Research continues into potential uses for this or a similar synthetic gel or of the included fibres. Some possibilities include new biodegradable polymers, space-filling gels, and as a means of stopping blood flow in accident victims and surgery patients.

Contents
Species
References
External links

Species


About 65 species are known, in 5 genera. A number of the species have only been recently discovered, living at depths of several hundred metres. Some of the species are listed here:

★ Genus ''Eptatretus''


Inshore hagfish, ''Eptatretus burgeri'' (Girard, 1855)


New Zealand hagfish, ''Eptatretus cirrhatus'' (Forster, 1801)


Black hagfish, ''Eptatretus deani'' (Evermann & Goldsborough, 1907)


Guadalupe hagfish, ''Eptatretus fritzi'' Wisner & McMillan, 1990


★ ''Eptatretus goliath'' Mincarone & Stewart, 2006


Sixgill hagfish, ''Eptatretus hexatrema'' (Müller, 1836)


Shorthead hagfish, ''Eptatretus mcconnaugheyi'' Wisner & McMillan, 1990


★ ''Eptatretus mendozai'' Hensley, 1985


Eightgill hagfish, ''Eptatretus octatrema'' (Barnard, 1923)


Fourteen-gill hagfish, ''Eptatretus polytrema'' (Girard, 1855)


Fivegill hagfish, ''Eptatretus profundus'' (Barnard, 1923)


Cortez hagfish, ''Eptatretus sinus'' Wisner & McMillan, 1990


Gulf hagfish, ''Eptatretus springeri'' (Bigelow & Schroeder, 1952)


Pacific hagfish, ''Eptatretus stoutii'' (Lockington, 1878)


★ ''Eptatretus strickrotti'' Møller & Jones, 2007

★ Genus ''Myxine''


Patagonian hagfish ''Myxine affinis'' Günther, 1870


★ ''Myxine australis'' Jenyns, 1842


Cape hagfish, ''Myxine capensis''


Whiteface hagfish, ''Myxine circifrons'' Garman, 1899


★ ''Myxine debueni'' Wisner & McMillan, 1995


★ ''Myxine dorsum'' Wisner & McMillan, 1995


★ ''Myxine fernholmi'' Wisner & McMillan, 1995


★ ''Myxine formosana'' Mok & Kuo, 2001


★ ''Myxine garmani'' Jordan & Snyder, 1901


★ Hagfish (or Atlantic hagfish), ''Myxine glutinosa''


★ ''Myxine hubbsi'' Wisner & McMillan, 1995


★ ''Myxine hubbsoides'' Wisner & McMillan, 1995


White-headed hagfish, ''Myxine ios''


★ ''Myxine jespersenae'' Møller, Feld, Poulsen, Thomsen & Thormar, 2005


★ ''Myxine knappi'' Wisner & McMillan, 1995


★ ''Myxine kuoi'' Mok, 2002


★ ''Myxine limosa'' Girard, 1859


★ ''Myxine mccoskeri'' Wisner & McMillan, 1995


★ ''Myxine mcmillanae'' Hensley, 1991


★ ''Myxine paucidens'' Regan, 1913


★ ''Myxine pequenoi'' Wisner & McMillan, 1995


★ ''Myxine robinsorum'' Wisner & McMillan, 1995


★ ''Myxine sotoi'' Mincarone, 2001

★ Genus ''Nemamyxine''


★ ''Nemamyxine elongata'' Richardson, 1958


★ ''Nemamyxine kreffti'' McMillan and Wisner, 1982

★ Genus ''Neomyxine''


★ ''Neomyxine biniplicata'' (Richardson and Jowett, 1951)

★ Genus ''Notomyxine''


★ ''Notomyxine tridentiger'' (Garman, 1899)

★ Genus ''Paramyxine''


★ ''Paramyxine atami'' Dean, 1904


★ ''Paramyxine cheni'' Shen and Tao, 1975


★ ''Paramyxine fernholmi'' Kuo, Huang and Mok, 1994


★ ''Paramyxine sheni'' Kuo, Huang and Mok, 1994


★ ''Paramyxine wisneri'' Kuo, Huang and Mok, 1994

★ Genus ''Quadratus''


★ ''Quadratus ancon'' Mok, Saavedra-Diaz and Acero P., 2001


★ ''Quadratus nelsoni'' (Kuo, Huang and Mok, 1994)


★ ''Quadratus taiwanae'' (Shen and Tao, 1975)


★ ''Quadratus yangi''

References



New species ''Eptatretus goliath''

The biology of hagfishes, J.M. Jørgensen, J.P. Lomholt, R.E. Weber and H. Malte (eds.), , , Chapman & Hall, 1997,

Complete Mitochondrial DNA of the Hagfish, Eptatretus burgeri: The Comparative Analysis of Mitochondrial DNA Sequences Strongly Supports the Cyclostome Monophyly, Delarbre ''et al'', , , Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution,

Early Vertebrate Evolution of the TATA-Binding Protein, TBP, Bondareva and Schmidt, , , Molecular Biology and Evolution,

★ Fudge, D. (2001). ''Hagfishes: Champions of Slime'' Nature Australia, Spring 2001 ed., Australian Museum Trust, Sydney. pp. 61-69.

External links



FishBase entry for Myxinidae

OceanLink description of hagfish

Quicktime movie of hagfish in repose and "sliming"

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