Dictionary Definition
ribbonfish
Noun
1 thin deep-water tropical fish 20 to 30 feet
long having a red dorsal fin [syn: oarfish, king
of the herring, Regalecus
glesne]
2 marine fish having a long compressed
ribbon-like body [also: ribbonfishes (pl)]
Extensive Definition
The ribbonfish are a family, Trachipteridae, of
marine fish. These pelagic fish
are named for their slim, ribbon-like appearance. They are rarely
seen alive as they typically live in deep waters (though are not
bottom feeders).
They are readily recognized by their anatomy: a
long, compressed, tape-like body, short head, narrow mouth and
feeble teeth. A high dorsal fin
occupies the whole length of the back; an anal fin is
absent, and the caudal fin, if
present, consists of two fascicles of rays of which the upper is
prolonged and directed upwards. The pectoral
fins are small, the pelvic fins
composed of several rays, or of one long ray only. Ribbon fish
possess all the characteristics of fish living at very great
depths. Their fins especially, and the membrane connecting them,
are of a very delicate and brittle structure. In young ribbonfish
some of the fin-rays are prolonged in an extraordinary degree, and
sometimes provided with appendages.
Specimens have been taken in the Atlantic, the
Mediterranean,
at Mauritius and in
the Pacific. The
species from the Atlantic has occurred chiefly on the northern
coasts, Iceland, Scandinavia,
Orkneys and
Scotland.
The north Atlantic species known in English the dealfish; its Icelandic
name is "vagmaer". Its length is 5 to 8 feet (1.5–2.5 m).
Specimens seem usually to be driven to the shore by gales in
winter, and are sometimes left by the tide. S. Nilsson, however, in
Scandinavia observed a living specimen in two or three fathoms
(4–5 m) of water moving something like a flatfish with one
side turned obliquely upwards. A specimen of Trachipterus ishikawae
was discovered on a beach in Kenting, Taiwan in November 2007,
alive but with a 10-cm cut wound to its side, and was returned to
deeper water.
Trachipterus ishikawae are commonly called
"earthquake fish" in Taiwan, and are popularly believed to appear
following major earthquake events due to sensitivity to
disturbances in the ocean floor. There are records of such
appearances following a 100-year earthquake in Hengchun in late
2006 and in Taidong in 2007, but other recorded sightings do not
correspond with seismic disturbances.
Species
FishBase reports ten species in three genera:- Genus Desmodema
- Whiptail ribbonfish, Desmodema lorum Rosenblatt & Butler, 1977.
- Polka-dot ribbonfish, Desmodema polystictum (Ogilby, 1898).
- Genus Trachipterus
- King-of-the-salmon, Trachipterus altivelis Kner, 1859.
- Deal fish, Trachipterus arcticus (Brünnich, 1771).
- Tapertail ribbonfish, Trachipterus fukuzakii Fitch, 1964.
- Trachipterus ishikawae Jordan & Snyder, 1901.
- Dealfish, Trachipterus jacksonensis (Ramsay, 1881).
- Ribbon fish, Trachipterus trachypterus (Gmelin, 1789).* Genus Zu
- Scalloped ribbonfish, Zu cristatus (Bonelli, 1819).
- Taper-tail ribbonfish, Zu elongatus Heemstra & Kannemeyer, 1984.
References
ribbonfish in German: Sensenfische
ribbonfish in Lithuanian: Dalgiažuvinės
ribbonfish in Chinese: 带鱼科