The Compleat Lophius
Lophius
piscatorius hath a face upon which only a mother could bestow
love. Indeed their mothers do love them but theirs is no maternal
affection for they can be cannibals. However because of the
dispersion of the little ones throughout the surface waters of
the sea a mother is unlikely to eat her own offspring. Thus
nature stops an abomination for any animal that eateth its own
children shall surely go extinct.
The Lophius is brownish drabbish fish and quite flat that
is squashed, unlike the fish known as flatfishes, the
Pleuronectiformes of philosophers which are in fact thin fish
turned upon their sides. L. piscatorius is truly flat,
with eyes, mouth, nostrils and gill slits all on its upper known
as the dorsal surface. It consists of head and tail with all the
essential organs squashed betwixt them. Oh, but what a head:
mostly mouth, filled with long thin teeth to capture and imprison
its prey. L. piscatorius lies in ambush of its food using
the first (front) fin ray of its dorsal fin to fish its prey.
This fin ray or illicium hath a swollen end known as an
esca which the fish moveth from side to side to give an
impression of a small dainty swimming morsel darting in the
water. When some prey fish comes to investigate, the predator
will move, extend its jaw and grab its
meal.
L. piscatorius is big, the largest of all the anglerfishes (the order known to philosophers as Lophiiformes) and is normally said to reach 2 m in length. However it is a quest to find those who would testify to this figure from their own experience. The table given below gives indication of the largest records I have come across for all the species of Lophius. Alas, many sports fisherman insist on using weight as a measure of the impressiveness of their catches rather than the less transient length.
Table the first. Wherein is given the largest Lophius known. All fish L. piscatorius unless otherwise stated
|
Weight (Kg) |
Length (cm) |
Location |
Date |
Note |
|
49 Lb 12oz |
9th July 1991 |
IGFA all tackle record for L. americanus |
||
|
57.7 Kg |
Norway |
|||
|
94 Lb 4 oz |
Belfast Lough, N Ireland |
|
||
|
152.5 (5 ft) |
Alderney, Channel Islands |
reported the Thursday after 3rd March 1865 |
from (?) the Jersey Times1 |
|
|
138 |
Cape Cod Bay |
Autumn 1978 |
NMFS (but what species?) |
|
1 "There is now being exhibited at 27 Fountain street a specimen of Lophius Piscatorius angelice, fishing frog, or sea devil which was stranded on the coast of Alderney a day or two ago. Mr Couch in his history of "Fishes of the British Islands" speaks of one measuring 5 - 6 feet in length as a large sample of the species. This specimen now exhibiting, measures 5 feet in length"
The Lophius is a bony fish and is hence unrelated to the other fish called monkfish in the British Isles, the angelshark Squatina squatina. They doth look superficially of the same kind but the keen eye will soon see the differences. For the mouth of the true monkfish is underneath its body. Presumably the similarity in names occurs because they are both flattened fishes of the benthos. I am tempted to suggest Squatina has priority for this name because if you had drunk enough the outline of this fish could just look like a monk in his habit. The two fish have been confused ever since antiquity. The colonists of the North American continent sensibly avoid any problems by calling their Lophius fishes, goosefish. Then again you would have to have imbibed much beer to think of a Lophius (of any species) looks like a goose.
Strange Things About the Lophius
An albino L. piscatorius was caught twenty miles of Plymouth (England) in 1998 A.D
They produce a huge free floating egg mass which can be over a fathom in length (the vast majority of fishes produce discrete eggs).
They have a fishing rod.
Despite being designed by nature for living on the bottom, adults are occasionally found in open water many fathoms above the sea floor.
If the Lophius seems strange to thou, then consider its cousins of the abyss.
Table the Second. The contents of these pages.
|
Eventually, Life History & Ecology |
Eventually, Fisheries |
|
|
Eventually, the true historie of the monkfish |
||
|
Eventually, the Index Librorum Piscium |