Deep-sea mystery solved: astonishing larval transformations and extreme sexual dimorphism unite three fish families

Author:

Johnson G. David1,Paxton John R2,Sutton Tracey T3,Satoh Takashi P4,Sado Tetsuya5,Nishida Mutsumi4,Miya Masaki5

Affiliation:

1. Division of Fishes, National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian InstitutionWashington, DC 20560, USA

2. Ichthyology, Australian MuseumSydney, New South Wales 2010, Australia

3. Virginia Institute of Marine ScienceGloucester Point, VA 23062, USA

4. Marine Bioscience, Ocean Research Institute, University of TokyoNakano-ku, Tokyo 164-8639, Japan

5. Zoology, Natural History Museum and InstituteChuo-ku, Chiba 266-8682, Japan

Abstract

The oceanic bathypelagic realm (1000–4000 m) is a nutrient-poor habitat. Most fishes living there have pelagic larvae using the rich waters of the upper 200 m. Morphological and behavioural specializations necessary to occupy such contrasting environments have resulted in remarkable developmental changes and life-history strategies. We resolve a long-standing biological and taxonomic conundrum by documenting the most extreme example of ontogenetic metamorphoses and sexual dimorphism in vertebrates. Based on morphology and mitogenomic sequence data, we show that fishes currently assigned to three families with greatly differing morphologies, Mirapinnidae (tapetails), Megalomycteridae (bignose fishes) and Cetomimidae (whalefishes), are larvae, males and females, respectively, of a single family Cetomimidae. Morphological transformations involve dramatic changes in the skeleton, most spectacularly in the head, and are correlated with distinctly different feeding mechanisms. Larvae have small, upturned mouths and gorge on copepods. Females have huge gapes with long, horizontal jaws and specialized gill arches allowing them to capture larger prey. Males cease feeding, lose their stomach and oesophagus, and apparently convert the energy from the bolus of copepods found in all transforming males to a massive liver that supports them throughout adult life.

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,Agricultural and Biological Sciences (miscellaneous)

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