
1 at La Jolla Shores and has been added to the Scripps collection. These bacteria enter the fish through small pores in the body. The soft bulb, also known as the esca, located at the end of the rod contains bioluminescent bacteria inside that enable it to glow in the dark of the deep sea. Quigley and others published First record of the Atlantic football fish Himantolophidae groenlandicus (Reinhardt 1837). Hook said a 4-foot lancetfish washed up on Dec. 3 Incredible Football Fish Facts The fishing rod is a modified fin at the top of the head known as the illicum. The footballfish form a family, Himantolophidae, of globose, deep-sea anglerfishes found in tropical and subtropical waters of the Atlantic, Indian, and Pacific Ocean. Pacific footballfish aren't the only deep-sea creatures to wash up in California this year. 13, but scientists weren't notified until several days later and were unable to collect it.
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Another Pacific footballfish was photographed in San Diego County's Black's Beach on Nov. Download stock pictures of Football fish on Depositphotos Photo stock for commercial use - millions of high-quality, royalty-free photos & images. In May, one washed ashore at Crystal Cove State Park and later became an exhibit at the Los Angeles County Natural History Museum. Hook described the find as "extremely rare," with only 31 known specimens of this deep-sea species collected worldwide – but it's the third footballfish to wash up on California shores this year. "So if you've seen 'Finding Nemo,' this is portrayed in 'Finding Nemo' where Dory sees a very beautiful light, swims to it, it's a giant anglerfish, very scary, they almost get eaten," he said. (credit: Scripps Institution of Oceanography at UC San Diego)

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"And so the anglerfish can kind of move this around in front of its head with all these attachments that also have little glowing tips and use them to kind of attract prey into its mouth."Īnd while such fish are usually found at very deep ocean depths, Frable said "Finding Nemo" made anglerfish famous to children and fish aficionados alike. "And it's modified up near the front of their head, and then the tip is this little ball and inside of this is bacteria that produces bioluminescence, that glows," Frable said in a video.

Frable said anglerfish get their name for their modified fin spin. He has since X-rayed the fish and collected tissue samples for genetic analysis, and it will be preserved for the institute's scientific archive. The fish was recovered by Ben Frable, the institute's collection manager of Marine Vertebrates.
