Overview
Snailfish are scorpaeniform marine fish of the family Liparidae. Widely distributed from the Arctic to Antarctic Oceans including the northern Pacific, the snailfish family contains 30 genera and 361 species.1] They are closely related to the sculpins of the family Cottidae and the lumpfish of the family Cyclopteridae. Snailfish are sometimes included within the latter family.
The snailfish family is poorly studied and few specifics are known. Their elongate, tadpole-like bodies are similar in profile to the rattails. Their heads are large with small eyes; their bodies are slender to deep, tapering to a very small tail. The extensive dorsal and anal fins may merge or nearly merge with the tail fin. Snailfish are scaleless with a thin, loose gelatinous skin; some species, such as the (Acantholiparis opercularis) have prickly spines as well. Their teeth are small and simple with blunt cusps. The deep-sea species have prominent, well-developed sensory pores of the head, part of the animals' lateral line system.
The pectoral fins are large and provide the snailfish with its primary means of locomotion. They are benthic fish with pelvic fins modified to form an adhesive disc; this nearly circular disc is absent in Paraliparis and Nectoliparis species. Snailfish range in size from Paraliparis australis at 5 centimetres (2.0 in) to Polypera simushirae at some 77 centimetres (30 in) in length. The latter species may reach a weight of 11 kilograms (24 lb), but most species are toward the smaller end of this range. Snailfish are of no interest to commercial fisheries.
Occurrence and habitat
The habitats chosen by snailfish are as widely variable as their size; they are found in both shallow intertidal zones and at depths of 7,500 metres (24,600 ft) or more, in both cold and warm waters. The diminutive inquiline snailfish (Liparis inquilinus) of the northwestern Atlantic is known to live out its life inside the mantle cavity of the scallop Placopecten magellanicus. The kelp snailfish (Liparis tunicatus) lives amongst the kelp forests of the Bering Strait and the estuary of the St. Lawrence River. The single species in genus Rhodichthys is endemic to the Norwegian Sea.[2] Other species are found on muddy or silty bottoms of continental slopes. Snailfish are abundant in most (especially polar) waters and are highly resilient.
Reproduction
Reproductive strategies are also known to vary among the species. At least one species, the abyssal snailfish (Careproctus ovigerum) of the North Pacific, is k nown to practice mouth brooding; that is, the male of the species carries the developing eggs around in his mouth. All species are known to lay a small number (c. 300) of relatively large eggs (4.5?8 mm in diameter). Other species of the genus Careproctus lay their eggs in the gill cavities of king crabs.
Diet
The diet of snailfish consists primarily of small benthic crustaceans, mollusks, polychaete worms, and other small invertebrates. Some species are also piscivorous. Specialist species such as Paraliparis rosaceus feed exclusively on sea cucumbers.
Species
Species include:
- Acantholiparis (Gilbert & Burke, 1912)
Acantholiparis opercularis- Acantholiparis caecus
- Acantholiparis opercularis
- Allocareproctus (Pitruk & Fedorov, 1993)
- Allocareproctus jordani
- Careproctus (Kr?yer, 1862)
- Careproctus abbreviatus
- Careproctus acaecus
- Careproctus acanthodes
- Careproctus aculeolatus
- Careproctus albescens
- Careproctus armatus
- Careproctus atrans
- Careproctus attenuatus
Careproctus attenuatus - Careproctus aureomarginatus
- Careproctus bathycoetus
- Careproctus batialis
- Careproctus bowersianus
Careproctus bowersianus - Careproctus burkei
- Careproctus cactiformis
- Careproctus candidus
- Careproctus colletti
- Careproctus continentalis
- Careproctus credispinulosus
- Careproctus curilanus
- Careproctus cyclocephalus
- Careproctus cypseluroides
- Careproctus cypselurus
- Careproctus entargyreus
- Careproctus entomelas
- Careproctus falklandicus
- Careproctus furcatus
- Careproctus furcellus
Careproctus furcellus - Careproctus georgianus
- Careproctus gilberti
- Careproctus griseldea
- Careproctus herwigi
- Careproctus homopterus
- Careproctus hyaleius
- Careproctus jordani
- Careproctus longifilis
- Careproctus longipectoralis
- Careproctus longipinnis
- Careproctus macranchus
- Careproctus macrodiscus
- Careproctus marginatus
- Careproctus mederi
- Careproctus melanuroides
- Careproctus melanurus
- Careproctus merretti
- Careproctus micropus
- Careproctus nigricans
- Careproctus novaezelandiae
- Careproctus opisthotremus
Careproctus opisthotremus - Careproctus ostentum
- Careproctus ovigerum
Careproctus ovigerum - Careproctus pallidus
- Careproctus parini
- Careproctus phasma
- Careproctus polarsterni
- Careproctus profundicola
- Careproctus pycnosoma
- Careproctus ranula
- Careproctus rastrinoides
- Careproctus rastrinus
- Careproctus reinhardti
Careproctus reinhardti - Careproctus rhodomelas
- Careproctus roseofuscus
- Careproctus rutilus
- Careproctus sarasa
- Careproctus scottae
- Careproctus segaliensis
- Careproctus seraphimae
- Careproctus simus
- Careproctus sinensis
- Careproctus smirmovi
- Careproctus spectrum
- Careproctus steini
- Careproctus trachysoma
- Crystallichthys (Jordan & Gilbert in Jordan & Evermann, 1898)
- Crystallichthys cyclospilus
Crystallichthys cyclospilus - Crystallichthys matsushimae
- Crystallichthys mirabilis
- Crystallichthys cyclospilus
- Edentoliparis (Andriashev, 1990)
- Edentoliparis terraenovae
- Eknomoliparis (Stein, Mel?ndez C. & Kong U., 1991)
- Eknomoliparis chirichignoae
- Elassodiscus (Gilbert & Burke, 1912)
Elassodiscus tremebundus- Elassodiscus caudatus
- Elassodiscus tremebundus
- Elassodiscus obscurus
- Eutelichthys (Tortonese, 1959)
- Eutelichthys leptochirus
- Genioliparis (Andriashev & Neyelov, 1976)
- Genioliparis lindbergi
- Gyrinichthys (Gilbert, 1896)
- Gyrinichthys minytremus
- Liparis (Scopoli, 1777)
- Liparis kusnetzovi
- Liparis agassizii
Liparis agassizii - Liparis alboventer
- Liparis antarctica
Liparis antarctica - Liparis atlanticus
- Liparis beringianus
- Liparis bikunin
- Liparis bristolensis
- Liparis burkei
- Liparis callyodon
- Liparis catharus
Liparis catharus - Liparis chefuensis
- Liparis coheni
- Liparis curilensis
- Liparis cyclopus
- Liparis dennyi
- Liparis dubius
- Liparis dulkeiti
- Liparis eos
- Liparis fabricii
Liparis fabricii - Liparis alboventer
- Liparis fishelsoni
- Liparis florae
Liparis florae - Liparis frenatus
- Liparis fucensis
- Liparis gibbus
- Liparis greeni
Liparis greeni - Liparis herschelinus
- Liparis inquilinus
- Liparis koefoedi
- Liparis latifrons
- Liparis liparis
- Liparis maculatus
- Liparis magacephalus
- Liparis marmoratus
Liparis marmoratus - Liparis megacephalus
- Liparis micraspidophorus
Liparis micraspidophorus - Liparis miostomus
- Liparis montagui
- Liparis mucosus
Liparis mucosus - Liparis newmani
- Liparis niger
- Liparis ochotensis
- Liparis owstoni
- Liparis petschiliensis
- Liparis pravdini
- Liparis pulchellus
Liparis pulchellus - Liparis punctulatus
- Liparis rutteri
- Liparis schantarensis
- Liparis takashimensis
- Liparis tanakai
- Liparis tessellatus
- Liparis tunicatus
- Lipariscus (Gilbert, 1915)
- Lipariscus nanus
- Lopholiparis
- Lopholiparis flerxi
- Nectoliparis (Gilbert & Burke, 1912)
Nectoliparis pelagicus- Nectoliparis pelagicus
- Notoliparis (Andriashev, 1975)
- Notoliparis antonbruuni
- Notoliparis kermadecensis
- Notoliparis kurchatovi
- Notoliparis macquariensis
- Osteodiscus (Stein, 1978)
- Osteodiscus andriashevi
- Osteodiscus cascadiae
- Palmoliparis (Balushkin, 1996)
- Palmoliparis beckeri
- Paraliparis (Collett, 1879)
- Paraliparis albeolus
- Paraliparis albescens
- Paraliparis anarthractae
- Paraliparis andriashevi
- Paraliparis antarcticus
Paraliparis antarcticus
- Paraliparis aspersus
- Paraliparis atramentatus
- Paraliparis australis
- Paraliparis bathybii
- Paraliparis bathybius
Paraliparis bathybius
- Paraliparis bipolaris
- Paraliparis calidus
- Paraliparis carlbondi
- Paraliparis cephalus
- Paraliparis cerasinus
- Paraliparis challengeri
- Paraliparis charcoti
- Paraliparis copei copei
- Paraliparis copei gibbericeps
- Paraliparis copei kerguelensis
- Paraliparis dactyloides
- Paraliparis dactylosus
- Paraliparis deani
- Paraliparis debueni
- Paraliparis devriesi
- Paraliparis diploprora
- Paraliparis dipterus
- Paraliparis duhameli
- Paraliparis edwardsi
Paraliparis edwardsi
- Paraliparis eltanini
- Paraliparis entochloris
- Paraliparis fuscolingua
- Paraliparis garmani
- Paraliparis gracilis
- Paraliparis grandis
- Paraliparis holomelas
- Paraliparis hystrix
- Paraliparis incognita
- Paraliparis kerguelensis
- Paraliparis kreffti
- Paraliparis latifrons
- Paraliparis leobergi
- Paraliparis leptochirus
- Paraliparis leucogaster
- Paraliparis leucoglossus
- Paraliparis liparina
- Paraliparis mandibularis
- Paraliparis mawsoni
- Paraliparis meganchus
- Paraliparis melanobranchus
- Paraliparis membranaceus
- Paraliparis mento
- Paraliparis meridionalis
- Paraliparis merodontus
- Paraliparis micrurus
- Paraliparis molinai
- Paraliparis monoporus
- Paraliparis neelovi
- Paraliparis operculosus
- Paraliparis pectoralis
- Paraliparis regina
- Paraliparis rosaceus
- Paraliparis skeliphrus
- Paraliparis somovi
- Paraliparis stehmanni
- Paraliparis tetrapteryx
- Paraliparis thalassobathyalis
- Paraliparis tompkinsae
- Paraliparis trilobodon
- Paraliparis trunovi
- Paraliparis ulochir
- Paraliparis valentinae
- Paraliparis violaceus
- Paraliparis wilsoni
- Polypera (Burke,
1912)
- Polypera simushirae
- Praematoliparis (Andriashev, 2003)
- Praematoliparis anarthractae
- Prognatholiparis (Orr & Busby, 2001)
- Prognatholiparis ptychomandibularis
- Psednos (Barnard, 1927)
- Psednos christinae
- Pseudoliparis (Andriashev, 1955)
- Pseudoliparis amblystomopsis
- Pseudoliparis belyaevi
- Pseudonotoliparis rassi
- Pseudonotoliparis (Pitruk, 1991)
- Pseudonotoliparis rassi
- Rhinoliparis (Gilbert, 1896)
- Rhinoliparis attenuatus
- Rhinoliparis barbulifer
- Rhodichthys (Collett, 1879)
- Rhodichthys regina
- Squaloliparis (Pitruk & Fedorov, 1993)
- Squaloliparis dentatus
- Temnocora (Burke, 1930)
- Temnocora candida
Temnocora candida
- Temnocora candida
In October 2008, a UK-Japan team discovered a shoal of Pseudoliparis amblystomopsis at a depth of 7.7 km (4.8 mi) in the Japan Trench.[3]
tail. The extensive dorsal and anal fins may merge or nearly merge with the tail fin. Snailfish are scaleless with a thin, loose gelatinous skin; some species, such as the (Acantholiparis opercularis) have prickly spines as well. Their teeth are small and simple with blunt cusps. The deep-sea species have prominent, well-developed sensory pores of the head, part of the animals' lateral line system.The pectoral fins are large and provide the snailfish with its primary means of locomotion. They are benthic fish with pelvic fins modified to form an adhesive disc; this nearly circular disc is absent in Paraliparis and Nectoliparis species. Snailfish range in size from Paraliparis australis at 5 centimetres (2.0 in) to Polypera simushirae at some 77 centimetres (30 in) in length. The latter species may reach a weight of 11 kilograms (24 lb), but most species are toward the smaller end of this range. Snailfish are of no interest to commercial fisheries.
Occurrence and habitat
The habitats chosen by snailfish are as widely variable as their size; they are found in both shallow intertidal zones and at depths of 7,500 metres (24,600 ft) or more, in both cold and warm waters. The diminutive inquiline snailfish (Liparis inquilinus) of the northwestern Atlantic is known to live out its life inside the mantle cavity of the scallop Placopecten magellanicus. The kelp snailfish (Liparis tunicatus) lives amongst the kelp forests of the Bering Strait and the estuary of the St. Lawrence River. The single species in genus Rhodichthys is endemic to the Norwegian Sea.[2] Other species are found on muddy or silty bottoms of continental slopes. Snailfish are abundant in most (especially polar) waters and are highly resilient.
Reproduction
Reproductive strategies are also known to vary among the species. At least one species, the abyssal snailfish (Careproctus ovigerum) of the North Pacific, is known to practice mouth brooding; that is, the male of the species carries the devel oping eggs around in his mouth. All species are known to lay a small number (c. 300) of relatively large eggs (4.5?8 mm in diameter). Other species of the genus Careproctus lay their eggs in the gill cavities of king crabs.
Diet
The diet of snailfish consists primarily of small benthic crustaceans, mollusks, polychaete worms, and other small invertebrates. Some species are also piscivorous. Specialist species such as Paraliparis rosaceus feed exclusively on sea cucumbers.
Species
Species include:
- Acantholiparis (Gilbert & Burke, 1912)
Acantholiparis opercularis< /div>- Acantholiparis caecus
- Acantholiparis opercularis
- Allocareproctus (Pitruk & Fedorov, 1993)
- Allocareproctus jordani
- Careproctus (Kr?yer, 1862)
- Careproctus abbreviatus
- Careproctus acaecus
- Careproctus acanthodes
- Careproctus aculeolatus
- Careproctus albescens
- Careproctus armatus
- Careproctus atrans
- Careproctus attenuatus
Careproctus attenuatus - Careproctus aureomarginatus
- Careproctus bathycoetus
- Careproctus batialis
- Careproctus bowersianus
Careproctus bowersianus - Careproctus burkei
- Careproctus cactiformis
- Careproctus candidus
- Careproctus colletti
- Careproctus continentalis
- Careproctus credispinulosus
- Careproctus curilanus
- Careproctus cyclocephalus
- Careproctus cypseluroides
- Careproctus cypselurus
- Careproctus entargyreus
- Careproctus entomelas
- Careproctus falklandicus
- Careproctus furcatus
- Careproctus furcellus
Careproctus furcellus - Careproctus georgianus
- Careproctus gilberti
- Careproctus griseldea
- Careproctus herwigi
- Careproctus homopterus
- Careproctus hyaleius
- Careproctus jordani
- Careproctus longifilis
- Careproctus longipectoralis
- Careproctus longipinnis
- Careproctus macranchus
- Careproctus macrodiscus
- Careproctus marginatus
- Careproctus mederi
- Careproctus melanuroides
- Careproctus melanurus
- Careproctus merretti
- Careproctus micropus
- Careproctus nigricans
- Careproctus novaezelandiae
- Careproctus opisthotremus
Careproctus opisthotremus - Careproctus ostentum
- Careproctus ovigerum
Careproctus ovigerum - Careproctus pallidus
- Careproctus parini
- Careproctus phasma
- Careproctus polarsterni
- Careproctus profundicola
- Careproctus pycnosoma
- Careproctus ranula
- Careproctus rastrinoides
- Careproctus rastrinus
- Careproctus reinhardti
Careproctus reinhardti - Careproctus rhodomelas
- Careproctus roseofuscus
- Careproctus rutilus
- Careproctus sarasa
- Careproctus scottae
- Careproctus segaliensis
- Careproctus seraphimae
- Careproctus simus
- Careproctus sinensis
- Careproctus smirmovi
- Careproctus spectrum
- Careproctus steini
- Careproctus trachysoma
- Crystallichthys (Jordan & Gilbert in Jordan & Evermann, 1898)
- Crystallichthys cyclospilus
Crystallichthys cyclospilus - Crystallichthys matsushimae
- Crystallichthys mirabilis
- Edentoliparis (Andriashev, 1990)
- Edentoliparis terraenovae
- Eknomoliparis (Stein, Mel?ndez C. & Kong U., 1991)
- Eknomoliparis chirichignoae
- Elassodiscus (Gilbert & Burke, 1912)
Elassodiscus tremebundus- Elassodiscus caudatus
- Elassodiscus tremebundus
- Elassodiscus obscurus
- Eutelichthys (Tortonese, 1959)
- Eutelichthys leptochirus
- Genioliparis (Andriashev & Neyelov, 1976)
- Genioliparis lindbergi
- Gyrinichthys (Gilbert, 1896)
- Gyrinichthys minytremus
- Liparis (Scopoli, 1777)
- Liparis kusnetzovi
- Liparis agassizii
Liparis agassizii - Liparis alboventer
- Liparis antarctica
Liparis antarctica - Liparis atlanticus
- Liparis beringianus
- Liparis bikunin
- Liparis bristolensis
- Liparis burkei
- Liparis callyodon
- Liparis catharus
Liparis catharus - Liparis chefuensis
- Liparis coheni
- Liparis curilensis
- Liparis cyclopus
- Liparis dennyi
- Liparis dubius
- Liparis dulkeiti
- Liparis eos
- Liparis fabricii
Liparis fabricii - Liparis alboventer
- Liparis fishelsoni
- Liparis florae
Liparis florae - Liparis frenatus
- Liparis fucensis
- Liparis gibbus
- Liparis greeni
Liparis greeni - Liparis herschelinus
- Liparis inquilinus
- Liparis koefoedi
- Liparis latifrons
- Liparis liparis
- Liparis maculatus
- Liparis magacephalus
- Liparis marmoratus
Liparis marmoratus - Liparis megacephalus
- Liparis micraspidophorus
Liparis micraspidophorus - Liparis miostomus
- Liparis montagui
- Liparis mucosus
Liparis mucosus - Liparis newmani
- Liparis niger
- Liparis ochotensis
- Liparis owstoni
- Liparis petschiliensis
- Liparis pravdini
- Liparis pulchellus
Liparis pulchellus - Liparis punctulatus
- Liparis rutteri
- Liparis schantarensis
- Liparis takashimensis
- Liparis tanakai
- Liparis tessellatus
- Liparis tunicatus
- Lipariscus (Gilbert, 1915)
- Lipariscus nanus
- Lopholiparis
- Lopholiparis flerxi
- Nectoliparis (Gilbert & Burke, 1912)
Nectoliparis pelagicus- Nectoliparis pelagicus
- Notoliparis (Andriashev, 1975)
- Notoliparis antonbruuni
- Notoliparis kermadecensis
- Notoliparis kurchatovi
- Notoliparis macquariensis
- Osteodiscus (Stein, 1978)
- Osteodiscus andriashevi
- Osteodiscus cascadiae
- Palmoliparis (Balushkin, 1996)
- Palmoliparis beckeri
- Paraliparis (Collett, 1879)
- Paraliparis albeolus
- Paraliparis albescens
- Paraliparis anarthractae
- Paraliparis andriashevi
- Paraliparis antarcticus
Paraliparis antarcticus
- Paraliparis aspersus
- Paraliparis atramentatus
- Paraliparis australis
- Paraliparis bathybii
- Paraliparis bathybius
Paraliparis bathybius
- Paraliparis bipolaris
- Paraliparis calidus
- Paraliparis carlbondi
- Paraliparis cephalus
- Paraliparis cerasinus
- Paraliparis challengeri
- Paraliparis charcoti
- Paraliparis copei copei
- Paraliparis copei gibbericeps
- Paraliparis copei kerguelensis
- Paraliparis dactyloides
- Paraliparis dactylosus
- Paraliparis deani
- Paraliparis debueni
- Paraliparis devriesi
- Paraliparis diploprora
- Paraliparis dipterus
- Paraliparis duhameli
- Paraliparis edwardsi
Paraliparis edwardsi
- Paraliparis eltanini
- Paraliparis entochloris
- Paraliparis fuscolingua
- Paraliparis garmani
- Paraliparis gracilis
- Paraliparis grandis
- Paraliparis holomelas
- Paraliparis hystrix
- Paraliparis incognita
- Paraliparis kerguelensis
- Paraliparis kreffti
- Paraliparis latifrons
- Paraliparis leobergi
- Paraliparis leptochirus
- Paraliparis leucogaster
- Paraliparis leucoglossus
- Paraliparis liparina
- Paraliparis mandibularis
- Paraliparis mawsoni
- Paraliparis meganchus
- Paraliparis melanobranchus
- Paraliparis membranaceus
- Paraliparis mento
- Paraliparis meridionalis
- Paraliparis merodontus
- Paraliparis micrurus
- Paraliparis molinai
- Paraliparis monoporus
- Paraliparis neelovi
- Paraliparis operculosus
- Paraliparis pectoralis
- Paraliparis regina
- Paraliparis rosaceus
- Paraliparis skeliphrus
- Paraliparis somovi
- Paraliparis stehmanni
- Paraliparis tetrapteryx
- Paraliparis thalassobathyalis
- Paraliparis tompkinsae
- Paraliparis trilobodon
- Paraliparis trunovi
- Paraliparis ulochir
- Paraliparis valentinae
- Paraliparis violaceus
- Paraliparis wilsoni
- Polypera (Burke, 1912)
- Polypera simushirae
- Praematoliparis (Andriashev, 2003)
- Praematoliparis anarthractae
- Prognatholiparis (Orr & Busby, 2001)
- Prognatholiparis ptychomandibularis
- Psednos (Barnard, 1927)
- Psednos christinae
- Pseudoliparis (Andriashev, 1955)
- Pseudoliparis amblystomopsis
- Pseudoliparis belyaevi
- Pseudonotoliparis rassi
- Pseudonotoliparis (Pitruk, 1991)
- Pseudonotoliparis rassi
- Rhinoliparis (Gilbert, 1896)
- Rhinoliparis attenuatus
- Rhinoliparis barbulifer
- Rhodichthys (Collett, 1879)
Rhodichthys regina
- Rhodichthys regina
- Squaloliparis (Pitruk & Fedorov, 1993)
- Squaloliparis dentatus
- Temnocora (Burke, 1930)
- Temnocora candida
Temnocora candida
- Temnocora candida
In October 2008, a UK-Japan team discovered a shoal of Pseudoliparis amblystomopsis at a depth of 7.7 km (4.8 mi) in the Japan Trench.[3]
References
[ Back to top ]- Froese, Rainer, and Daniel Pauly, eds. (2006). "Liparidae" in FishBase. February 2006 version.
External links
[ Back to top ]Taxonomy
[ Back to top ]The Family Liparidae is further organized into finer groupings including:
- Subfamily (3): Epidendroideae · Liparinae · Philodendroideae
- Tribe (1): Malaxideae
- Genus (2): Liparis · Lopholiparis
- Species: ZipcodeZoo has pages for 85 species and subspecies in the Family Liparidae.
Genera
[ Back to top ]Liparis
Liparis is a genus of orchids, commonly known as flase twayblade. It comprises of about 200 species with cosmopolitan distribution. Most species typically bear dull-colored, purplish flowers in a terminal spike. [more]
Lopholiparis
More info about the Genus Lopholiparis may be found here.
References
[ Back to top ]- ^ Liparidae at Encyclopedia of Life
- ^ C.Michael Hogan. 2011. Norwegian Sea. Encyclopedia of Earth. Eds. P.Saundry & C.J.Cleveland. National Council for Science and the Environment. Washington DC
- ^ http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/7655358.stm
Sources
[ Back to top ]- The text on this page is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It includes material from Wikipedia retrieved Wednesday, April 25, 2012.
- The distribution map on the Distribution tab comes from the Global Biodiversity Information Facility and is used with permission.
- Photographs on this page are copyrighted by individual photographers, and individual copyrights apply.
- The technology underlying this page, including the controls behind Keep Exploring, is owned by the BayScience Foundation. All rights are reserved.
