The alien-like football fish is so rarely seen that only 31 of them have ever been recorded.

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Published: Friday, 31 May 2024 at 07:47 AM


Beachcombers in Oregon were in for a surprise when they stumbled across an alien-like creature as black as an oil slick with a gaping mouth, needle-sharp teeth and an unnerving array of spikes across its body.

The strange fish they’d discovered – a deep-sea anglerfish called a Pacific football fish (Himantoliphus sagamius) – is so rarely seen that only 31 of them have ever been recorded. 

Pacific football fish, which are almost never seen by humans, are thought to live at depths of between around 300m and 1,200m deep. Credit: Seaside Aquarium

The Seaside Aquarium shared the exciting find on its Facebook page, saying this is the first Pacific football fish they’re aware of being reported in the area. 

“They live in the depths throughout the Pacific Ocean, so they can be found off the Oregon Coast but they are rarely seen,” explains the Seaside Aquarium’s Tiffany Boothe. They live in such deep waters, she says, that it’s remarkably rare for them to be found onshore.

Anglerfish are fascinating animals known for their sexual dimorphism. In many species, females are significantly larger than males. When mating, the tiny males clamp onto the female and fuse into her body like a parasite – becoming a tiny portable sperm sack that she can use when she wants to reproduce.  

“Using well-developed olfactory organs, they find and fuse themselves to females, eventually losing their eyes, internal organs, and everything else but the testes,” says the California Academy of Sciences.

“The male becomes a permanent appendage that draws nutrition from its female host and serves as an easily accessible source of sperm.”