The daggertooth (Anotopterus pharao, meaning "without fins on its back, of the Pharaoh") is a species of daggertooth. Its distribution includes the North Atlantic Ocean and west of Africa. The record size for this species is 96 cm and was hermaphroditic. Daggertooths are occasionally found dead in bottom trawls used for firefly squid or shrimp. They are similar to needlefish or gars. However, they are distinct. Netted daggertooth specimens are rarely identifiable, mostly because of their soft bodies, which are easily torn or flattened. This is typical of benthic animals of the deep ocean, like some transparent squids. In fact, the bodies are so soft, when pushed against the back of a trawl net, they often die because their organs are crushed and they rip. The habitat of the daggertooth is the open abyss, where few obstacles occur with which to come into physical contact.

Daggertooth
Juvenile (top) and adult (bottom) specimens of Anotopterus pharao.
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Actinopterygii
Order: Aulopiformes
Family: Anotopteridae
Genus: Anotopterus
Species:
A. pharao
Binomial name
Anotopterus pharao
Zugmayer, 1911
Synonyms

Anotopterus arcticus Nybelin, 1946

Metamorphosis

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The species undergoes metamorphosis, whereupon they become black in colour, become toothless, stop feeding, develop very large gonads and the gastrointestinal tract atrophies. This was discovered in 1971, after German ichthyologist Günther Maul caught such a specimen off Madeira that measured 75.9 cm. It was posited that there may be a vertical downwards migration at this final short stage of life. The reduced light at this increased depth may have selected for the black colouration. As Anotopterus quickly shed and replace their teeth, it was hypothesized that by halting the replacement of shed teeth (which is potentially linked to the reduced exposure to Vitamin D at increased depths), toothlessness occurs quite rapidly. The phenomenon of a downwards migration paired with a colour change to black is also seen in species such as the common fangtooth, although during this process, that species develops fangs for feeding instead of losing them. The apparent rarity of specimens caught during this last stage of life may be a result of the combination of the cessation of feeding and the migration to deeper depths, making them difficult to catch.[1]

References

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  1. ^ Maul, Günther Edmund (1971). "Report on the fishes taken in Madeiran and Canarian waters during the Summer-Autumn Cruises of the "Discovery II" 1959 and 1961. III. Order Iniomi I. On a toothless, sexually mature Anotopterus". Bocagiana.