Stomiiformes |

Elongated bristlemouth, Gonostoma elongatum
(top) and Bonapartia pedaliota (bottom)
|
Scientific classification |
|
Suborders |
Gonostomatoidei
Phosichthyoidei
See text for families. |
Stomiiformes is an order of deep-sea
ray-finned fishes of very diverse
morphology, including dragonfishes, lightfishes, marine
hatchetfishes, viperfishes, and loosejaws. The order
comprises four families, more than fifty genera and a total
of about 320 species. As usual for benthic fishes, there is no common name for all the
species comprised in this order.
The smallest species of this order is Cyclothone pygmaeae,
native to the Mediterranean Sea (1.5 cm for adult
specimens), while the largest one is Opostomias micripnis,
widely found in the Atlantic, Indian and Pacific Ocean (50 cm for adults). Other species range
from less than 2 cm to more than 50 cm in length.
Distribution and morphology
Veiled anglemouth, Cyclothone microdon
Members of this order are mostly benthic fishes (living
in deep oceanic waters), even if certain of them are also
found in middle waters. Their distribution around the
world's oceans is very wide, ranging from subtropical and
temperate water bodies up to subartic or even antarctic
ones.
These fish have a nightmarish and weird appearance. They
all have teeth on the
premaxilla and maxilla. Their maxillary ligaments, as well
as some muscles and certain bones in the branchial cavity,
are specialized in a distinctive way. Most have large mouths
extending back past the eyes (Some also have chin barbels).
Several fins might be absent, and colors are typically dark brown or
black.
Luminescence
Ichthyococcus ovatus
As is the usual case for abyssal sea creatures, all
members of Stomiiformes but one have luminescent organs (photophores),
whose structure is characteristic of the order. The gleam
emitted can be more or less strong and its color can be
light yellow, white, violet or red. The lighting mechanism
can be very simple — consisting of small gleaming points on
the fish body — or very elaborate, involving lenses and
refractors.
The most common arrangement is one or two rows of
photophores on the lower part of each side of the body. The
rows run from the head down to the tip of the tail.
Photophores are also present at the tip of chin barbels.
Stomiiforms do not seem to utilize bacteria as their
lighting source: no bacterium has ever been found in their
photophores. However, recent researches have found that a
piece of bacterium-like DNA in one photophore, which suggests that these contain
bacteria that must have been largely modified.
The light coming from these fish is generally invisible
to their prey.
Daily migration
During the day, Stomiiformes fish stay in deep waters and
measure the intensity of the light that reaches them. By
doing so, they manage to stay in the region that always has
the same light intensity. When the sun sets, the fish
follows the dimming sunlight up to near-surface waters. The
upper regions are richer in animal life: small fishes, and
planktonic invertebrates. The fish hunt and feed on these
organisms all night long and swim back to deep waters as
soon as the sun rises.
This daily migration is well observed at quite a few
species of stomiiforms. However it is not specific to this
fish order, and some larger species of the order — among
them the largest predator of the oceans — stay in their
deep-sea habitat and feed on smaller migrants that return
from the surface.
Reproduction
Stomiiforms lay eggs generally in deep seas, but the eggs
are light and float towards the ocean surface. They hatch in
surface waters. When the larvae have completed their
metamorphosis and look like adults, they descend to join
the adults.
Like a lot of benthic fish species, certain members of
the order — especially in the genera Gonostoma and
Cyclothone — change their sex during their life.
They are born being males, then transform into females.
Classification
Lovely hatchetfish, Argyropelecus
aculeatus
There are four families in two suborders:
- Suborder
Gonostomatoidei
- Gonostomatidae — bristlemouths
Sternoptychidae — marine hatchetfishes
- Suborder
Phosichthyoidei
- Phosichthyidae — lightfishes (spelled
Photichthyidae in J. S. Nelson)
Stomiidae — barbeled dragonfishes and loosejaws.
Primitive stomiiforms had thin brownish bodies, with rows
of egg-shaped photophores adorning the lower body parts, and
mouths with numerous teeth. From this primitive form two
evolutive lineages diverged.
In the suborder
Gonostomatoidei, the Gonostomatidae are primitive and the
Sternoptychidae are more derived.
In the suborder
Phosichthyoidei, the Phosichthyidae are also primitive
bioluminescent organisms, while the Stomiidae are extremely derived and diverse.
References
-
"Stomiiformes".
FishBase. Ed. Ranier Froese and Daniel Pauly.
January 2006 version. N.p.: FishBase, 2006.
-
J. S. Nelson, Fishes of the World