Results 41 to 50 of about 345 (164)
The Inner Ear and its Coupling to the Swim Bladder in the Deep-Sea Fish Antimora rostrata (Teleostei: Moridae). [PDF]
The inner ear structure of Antimora rostrata and its coupling to the swim bladder were analyzed and compared with the inner ears of several shallow-water species that also have similar coupling. The inner ear of Antimora has a long saccular otolith and sensory epithelium as compared to many other fishes. Some parts of the membranous labyrinth are thick
Deng X, Wagner HJ, Popper AN.
europepmc +4 more sources
Family Moridae Moreau 1881 Morini Moreau 1881:v.3 247 [ref. 3040] (subfamily) Mora Eretmophoridae Jordan 1923a:164 [ref. 2421] (family) Eretmophorus Tripterophycidae Whitley 1948a:79 [ref.
Laan, Richard Van Der +2 more
openaire +2 more sources
FIGURE 2. Physiculus indicus sp. nov., paratype, MTRLDST 00215, preserved. A. Lateral view. B. Ventral view of abdomen. C. Radiograph..Published as part of <i>Idrees Babu, K. K., Ho, Hsaun-Ching, Mariyambi, P.C. & Sureshkumar, S., 2022, Two new
Idrees Babu, K. K. +3 more
core +1 more source
FIGURE 5. Physiculus lakshadeepa sp. nov., fresh condition, from the holotype???. A. Lateral view of anterior body, fresh condition. B. Close-up of high first dorsal fin with first ray filamentous. C.
Idrees Babu, K. K. +3 more
core +1 more source
Melanic hyper-pigmentation in the genus Lepidion (Gadiformes: Moridae)
Two cases of melanic hyper-pigmentation in Lepidion lepidion are reported from two localities in Spanish Atlantic waters. A bibliographic search revealed the occurrence of this chromatic anomaly in two other Lepidion specimens, the first of them reported in the late 19th century. Macroscopically, the colour abnormality was characterized by the presence
Bañón, Rafael +4 more
openaire +2 more sources
The drawings, detailed pictures, precise descriptions and measurements that characterize otoliths must be made available for studies in various areas, including taxonomy, phylogeny, ecology, fisheries, paleontology, diversity, predator-prey relationships
Carmen Lucia Del Bianco Rossi-Wongtschowski +5 more
doaj +1 more source
Calcium carbonate production by fish in temperate marine environments
Abstract Marine bony fishes are an important source of calcium carbonate with relevance to sediment production and inorganic carbon cycling. However, knowledge of the production and fate of these carbonates is based primarily on data from warm‐water reef fishes, with efforts to assess global‐scale implications constrained by assumptions that this small
Michael A. Salter +2 more
wiley +1 more source
Squids are important components of marine ecosystems because of their role as both predator and prey. Across the Tasman Sea, Gould's arrow squid (Nototodarus gouldi) is a commercially targeted ommastrephid squid that supports an economically important fishery.
Lucia Hu +4 more
wiley +1 more source
Fishes that rule the world: circumtropical distributions revisited
Abstract Briggs () published the first checklist of circumtropical fishes with 107 species. This work served for a half century as the most comprehensive checklist of globally distributed fishes, but the intervening years witnessed many discoveries, and molecular data have changed the way we evaluate species.
Michelle R Gaither +3 more
wiley +1 more source
Figure 7. Pseudophycis barbata. A, NMNZ P.037124, 450 mm SL, Bay of Plenty, east of north-east point, North Island, New Zealand (photograph C. Struthers, NMNZ); B, BMNH 1863.1.15.38, holotype of Pseudophycis barbata, 394 mm SL, Victoria, South Australia (
Struthers, Carl +2 more
core +1 more source

