|

How can you tell a hagfish if you see one? 
..They
look kind of like eels or lamprey, being long, slender and light pinkish
grey in colour.
..They
are elegantly simple in design, having no fins (except for a primitive
tail fin), knobby protrusions, and few accessories to speak of.
..Their
eyes are reduced but they have good senses of touch and smell.
..They
have a ring of short sensitive tentacles around their mouths.
..Large
slime glands line their sides along the length of their bodies.
What do they do?
..For
a long time, people thought of hagfish as scavengers and parasites, probably
due to their habit or burrowing into dead or dying animals and eating
them from the inside out. In fact, most of their diet is made up of marine
worms and other invertebrates. Scientists used to think the hagfish looked
primitive as a result of the loss of characteristics often associated
with being a parasite. Now common belief is that hagfish just haven't
needed to change for the last couple of hundred million years. Now that's
a successful body plan and lifestyle!
..Another
ability that had won fame for hagfish is the mass amounts of slime almost
instantly secreted as a defense mechanism.

Where are they found?
..Hagfish
can be found in the chilly waters of the antitropical north and south.
..They
tend to live on and in muddy sea floors in very dense groups (up to 15,000
in an area). Because females tend to produce large eggs in small numbers,
their population sizes suggest a low death rate.
What kind of tricks can they do?
..One
very useful trick hagfish have developed is the ability to tie themselves
in knots, and be able to slide in and out of this knot. This can be used
to escape predators, to clean themselves of slime, and to work their way
into a carcass. This picture shows: A) knotting; this movement is used
to clean slime off the body; B) escaping from capture using knotting,
a very powerful motion; C) pulling on food by knotting
..They
can also sneeze to unclog their nostrils of their own slime.
What else makes them special?
 ..Hagfish
don't really have jaws. Instead they have two pairs of rasps on top of
a tongue. They pull meat into their mouths with the tongue, then tear
it off the prey with the rasps.
..Newly
hatched hagfish look just like the adults, but have both male and female
sex organs. When they mature, they will be either male or female, but
have the ability to change from one to the other if the population structure
demands it.
 ..They
have a very low metabolism. Once they eat, they may not have to again
for up to seven months.
..Although
hagfish have a partial skull, they have no back bone, so are not true
vertebrates. What skeleton they do have is made of cartilage.
How are they used by people?
Yes, humans will find a way to exploit even
these seemingly useless and repulsive animals.
 ..In
Korea, almost 5 million pounds of hagfish meat are consumed each year.
..Hagfish
skin is processed into "eelskin" boots, bags, wallets, purses,
and other products.
..Overfishing
in Asia has decimated their local hagfish stocks, so the Asian hagfish
fishery has turned its eyes towards North America, where these "slime
eels" are considered a worthless bycatch.
..It
could mean a boost of over $2 million to the local fisheries, but care
must be taken not to damage these stocks as well. Hagfish may not be pretty
in most people's eyes, but they serve a purpose and are slow to reproduce.
It would take them a long time to recover from over-harvesting. Who can
tell what removing them from the local food web would do?
Phylogenetics amongst species (for hard
core scientists):
There are about 20 species of hagfish
divided into four genera (Myxine, Neomyxine, Paramyxine,
and Eptatretus). These four groups make a sort of evolutionary
continuum with regards to external traits. For example, the Myxine
and Neomyxine are considered more advanced than the latter two for
several reasons:
..They
have a single pair of common external gill openings. The latter two have
two minute separate gill openings (considered primitive). Paramyxine's
openings are closer together than Eptatretus' so Paramyxine
is considered more closely related to the first two.
..The
eyes in Myxine and Neomyxine are smaller than those of the
other two, suggesting a less primitive condition by an adaptation to the
dark environment favoured my hagfish.

|