User:FloppingFish/sandbox

Viperfish habitat edit 3/20/2023

- Viperfishes live in meso- and bathypelagic environments and have been found dominating submarine calderas such as the Kurose Hole, which is the site with the highest Chauliodus density known in the world.

- Bibliography


 * 1) Ohtsuka, S., Lindsay, D. J., & Izawa, K. (2018). A new genus and species of the family Pennellidae (Copepoda, Siphonostomatoida) infecting the Pacific viperfish Chauliodus macouni. Parasite (Paris, France), 25, 6. https://doi.org/10.1051/parasite/2018003
 * 2) Bergman, Leah A., Sangekar, Mehul N, Hidaka, Mitsuko, & Lindsay, D. J. (2023). Deep-sea fishes in a sauna: Viperfishes dominate a submarine caldera. Deep Sea Research Part I: Oceanographic Research Papers, Volume 193. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.dsr.2022.103950
 * 3) Eduardo, L. N., Lucena-Frédou, F., Mincarone, M. M., Soares, A., Le Loc'h, F., Frédou, T., Ménard, F., & Bertrand, A. (2020). Trophic ecology, habitat, and migratory behaviour of the viperfish Chauliodus sloani reveal a key mesopelagic player. Scientific reports, 10 (1), 20996. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-020-77222-8
 * 4) Parnel, Maria M., Emmett, Robert L., & Brodeur, Richard D. (2008). Ichthyoplankton community in the Columbia River plume off Oregon: effects of fluctuating oceanographic conditions. Fishery Bulletin. https://aquadocs.org/handle/1834/25492
 * 5) Marks, Alex D., David W. Kerstetter, David M. Wyanski, and Tracey T. Sutton. (2020). “Reproductive Ecology of Dragonfishes (Stomiiformes: Stomiidae) in the Gulf of Mexico.” Frontiers in Marine Science 7  https://doi.org/10.3389/fmars.2020.00101