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Topic: Synaphobranchus


  
  Synaphobranchidae - MavicaNET
Slatjaw Cutthroat Eel - Synaphobranchus kaupi - English
This deepsea species occurs throughout the world, off the coasts of Australia, Hawaii, and in the Indian Ocean, as well as ranging north to the Davis Strait.
Shared characteristics include dorsal and anal fins that are continuous with the caudal fin, and dark colouration, usually brown, grey, or fl.
www.mavicanet.com /directory/fra/24765.html   (259 words)

  
 Fish ID Guide   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-25)
The Synaphobranchidae are a family of eels known as the arrowtooth or cut-throat eels.
Synaphobranchus kaupi has a slender elongate body and a conical head with the tip of its snout turned downwards.
Scales are present on the body but not on the head and the colouration is fl to brown with a lighter edge on the vertical fins anteriorly (Whitehead et al.
www.ecoserve.ie /projects/aces/eel.html   (204 words)

  
 Tim Shank's Lab: Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
The dominant mobile fauna near actively venting edifices was a purple-gray ~10 to 30cm-long cut-throat eel (Synaphobranchus kaupi).
The urchin, Areosoma fenestratum, was collected from the side of an active spire, but was more commonly observed in inactive areas.
Wreckfish (Polyprion americanus) and cut-throat eels (Synaphobranchus kaupi) were prevalent surrounding the Lost City fields.
www.whoi.edu /science/B/people/tshank/projects/p_macrofaunal.htm   (1001 words)

  
 NORFANZ Voyage Diary   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-25)
The most common fish in the net was the Globe-headed Rattail, Cetonurus globiceps, a distinctive fish with a swollen soggy head and little narrow tail (hence the name).
This catch also caught many basketwork eels, Synaphobranchus capensis.
They get their name from the criss-cross pattern on their bodies visible when their skin is scraped off.
www.oceans.gov.au /norfanz/week3_day16.htm   (728 words)

  
 Mar-Eco - Bottom Fish Communities of the Mid-ocean Ridge   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-25)
A group that was given particular attention recently was deepwater eels of the family Synaphobranchidae.
Ichthyologists Manuel Biscoito from Madeira and and Gui Menezes from the Azores found that two very similar species Synaphobranchus affinis and S.
To tell them apart, details such as teeth numbers and placement must be inspected on every fish.
www.mar-eco.no /mareco_news/2006/bottom_fish_communities   (530 words)

  
 Research Papers   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-25)
High swimming and metabolic activity in the deep-sea eel Synaphobranchus kaupii revealed by integrated in situ and in vitro measurements.
Integrated studies of deep-sea animal physiology and activity: experiments on the eel Synaphobranchus kaupi and the shrimp Acanthephyra eximia.
High-energy phosphate metabolism during exercise and recovery in Antarctic and temperate scallops.
www.oceanlab.abdn.ac.uk /research/papers.shtml   (10841 words)

  
 Australian Museum Larval Fishes Early life history database - SYNAPHOBRANCHIDAE Synaphobranchus capensis (Barnard 1923)
Australian Museum Larval Fishes Early life history database - SYNAPHOBRANCHIDAE Synaphobranchus capensis (Barnard 1923)
Sears Foundation for Marine Research, Allen Press Inc., Lawrence, Kansas.
The occurrence of elvers of Synaphobranchus affinis on the continental slope off North Carolina.
www.amonline.net.au /larval_fishes/database.cfm?fish_id=1474   (61 words)

  
 Occurrence - Search Result   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-25)
FROM KOBE, JAPAN TO YOKOHAMA, JAPAN: SHIO MISAKI LT., N. Synaphobranchus kaupii
INDONESIA, CELEBES, GULF OF BONI, OLANG PT., N. Synaphobranchus brevidorsalis
JAPAN: IN KAGOSHIMA GULF, MIZIMOKO SHIMA LT., N. Synaphobranchus affinis
www.fishbase.org /museum/GenusOccurrenceList.cfm?genus=Synaphobranchus   (1017 words)

  
 [No title]
Results Analysis of video recordings of the deep-water fish Antimora rostrata (2500 m) showed that its burst swimming performances were low, but not significantly lower than expected for a large, cold-water fish  ADDIN ENRfu (Bailey et al.
More recent studies have provided similar data on the eel Synaphobranchus kaupi.
2002), while the eel Synaphobranchus kaupi (1500 m) exhibited oxygen consumptions similar to, or higher than, shallow-water eels (Figure 2).
www-heb.pac.dfo-mpo.gc.ca /congress/2004/Fitness/18BaileyIntegrated.doc   (1972 words)

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