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   » » Wiki: Dysommina Rugosa
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Dysommina rugosa
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Dysommina rugosa is an in the family Synaphobranchidae (cutthroat eels). It was described by in 1951.Ginsburg, I., 1951 (30 Sept.) ref. The eels of the northern Gulf Coast of the United States and some related species. Texas Journal of Science v. 3 (no. 3): 431–485. It is a , deep water-dwelling eel which is known from the western and eastern central . It dwells at a depth range of 260–775 metres, and is found off the continental slope. Males can reach a maximum of 37 centimetres.


Description
D. rugosa is a fairly stout elongated cylindrical fish growing to a of about . The snout is fleshy with a number of papillae and tapers towards the front, overhanging the lower jaw. There are two pairs of nostrils, one pair at the tip of the snout and the other pair between the eyes, which are large and circular and covered with skin. There are no premaxillary teeth and the maxillary and dentary teeth are tiny and arranged in a number of irregular rows. The roof of the mouth has four large, compound teeth. The gill openings are crescent-shaped and about the same size as the eyes. The origin of the dorsal fin is further back than the origin of the pectoral fins. The dorsal and anal fins are confluent with the small caudal fin. The ventral surface of this fish is darker than the head and dorsal surface, and the pectoral, dorsal and anal fins are pale
(2025). 9780292757059, University of Texas Press. .
with yellowish-white edges.


Distribution and habitat
The species occurs in the tropical western Atlantic Ocean, the Caribbean Sea and Gulf of Mexico as well as the eastern and central Pacific Ocean and Hawaii. It is a deepwater species found near the seabed on the continental slope at depths between .


Eel City
In 2005, during underwater exploration of the caldera of Vailulu'u volcano at a depth of about in the mid-Pacific, it was found that large numbers of eels were present in low-temperature hydrothermal vents at a locality the researchers dubbed "". This area had pillow lava flows draped with yellowish microbial mats, and whenever the touched down, previously hidden eels, since identified as Dysommina rugosa, swarmed into the . It is thought that the eels hide in crevices in the yellow mats for their own protection and feed on drifting past.

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