SCIENCE

Pelican eel: The midnight zone ‘gulper’ with a giant mouth to swallow animals bigger than itself

QUICK FACTS

Name: Pelican eel (Eurypharynx pelecanoides)

Where it lives: In tropical and temperate regions of the deep ocean, at depths from 1,600 feet to nearly 10,000 feet (500 to 3,000 meters)

What it eats: Crustaceans, fish, squid and other marine invertebrates

As it drifts through the inky blackness of the “midnight zone” in the deep sea, the pelican eel undulates its narrow, whiplike tail and long, snakelike body. It’s hard to imagine its slender form consuming large prey — that is, until the eel unfolds its jaw like an umbrella and yawns its cavernous sac of a mouth.

Like its pelican namesake, this eel has an elastic pouch under its lower jaw that balloons open as its jaw gapes wide, engulfing anything unlucky enough to be swimming close to the eel’s head. And with an expandable throat and stomach, a pelican eel can scoop up animals larger than its own body, swallowing prey whole while filtering the mouthful of water through its teeth and gills.

Pelican Eel Seen Just After Eating in Costa Rica Deep Dive – YouTube


Watch On


Source link

Related Articles

Back to top button