Fishes - Australian Museum Fish Site

The Fish Department - Research

Classification, Diversity And Biology Of Whalefishes And Relatives

Research Fellow: Dr John Paxton

Whalefishes of the family Cetomimidae are among the deepest dwelling of deepsea fishes, with most species living in the bathypelagic area of the water column between 1.5 and 3.5 km below the surface. Whalefishes are so named not for their size (the largest is only 40 cm long and most of the 35 species do not exceed 20 cm), but for their shape - a large head, exceptionally large mouth, and fins placed far back on the body. Living at depths of perpetual darkness, their eyes are reduced and a greatly enlarged lateral line provides information about the movements of predators and prey. Many questions remain about their biology. We do know that they eat mainly crustaceans, and that the only males so far found, at 3-5 cm length, are much smaller than mature females. Whalefish larvae of this family have never been found.

Current research projects on whalefishes include

Publications From This Research

List of publications

Relevant Websites

Dr John Paxton Page

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