Rare ‘football fish’ washes up near Cannon Beach

Published 1:25 pm Saturday, May 18, 2024

CANNON BEACH — A deep-sea angler fish, called a Pacific football fish (Himantoliphus sagamius), has been found by local beachcombers just south of Cannon Beach.

Living in complete darkness, at 2,000 to 3,300 feet, these fish are rarely seen. In fact, only 31 specimens have been recorded around the world. While a handful of football fish have been recorded in New Zealand, Japan, Russia, Hawaii, Ecuador, Chile and California, this is the first one reported on the Oregon Coast to the knowledge of personnel at Seaside Aquarium, who announced the find.

Little is known about their life history, but what is known is unusually fascinating. Like other angler fish, they use light that shines from a phosphorescent bulb on their forehead to attract prey. Food at the depths that these guys peruse can be very sparse, so football fish are not picky eaters. They eat anything that can fit into their mouths.

Only females actively hunt as the males are actually more like parasites. Males, being 10 times smaller than females, find a female to fuse themselves to. They lose their eyes and internal organs, getting all their nutrients from their female partners. In return, they provide females with a steady source of sperm. How the males find the females in the pitch dark is still unknown.

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