The footage, captured in Spain's Canary Islands, shows the female fish, whose Latin name translates to "black sea monster," swimming through the light-filled ocean waters off the coast of Tenerife.
A rare, deep-sea fish washed ashore in Carlsbad last week and has since been turned over to biologists at the Scripps ...
Ah, Catfish Cove in Yukon – the seafood spot that’s as Oklahoma as tornados and football, but with a maritime twist. It’s ...
Second, the Fe:C range of fish does not extend to the lowest Fe:C of plankton found in HNLC waters, even though some of the whole fish samples were collected from the broadly iron-limited Southern ...
or predict the consequences of this change on these fish. However, there is evidence to suggest that sustained ocean-warming will impact the broad-scale distribution patterns and abundance of ...
Landlocked Missouri might seem an unlikely spot for seafood, but the White River Fish House in Branson is reeling in fans ...
A massive warehouse on the edge of the Everglades seems like an odd place to farm salmon, but it just might represent be the ...
Roxanne Beltran is next in line to lead the project, and her new study being published as the February 14 cover story for Science reports that seals can essentially act as “smart sensors” for ...
A very rare fish sighting is making a splash on social media. A deep-sea anglerfish, with its mouthful of sharp teeth, was spotted near the surface of the water near the Canary Islands off the coast ...
Deep sea fish makes surprise appearance near the ocean's surface ...
Sea lamprey are not supposed to be in the Great Lakes, which is why the U.S. spends about $20 million each year to protect ...
According to the organization, the fish is a so-called "black seadevil" known by its scientific name Melanocetus johnsonii. They typically swim between 650 and 6,500 feet below the ocean's surface.