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- Hagfish - Wikipedia
The Atlantic hagfish, representative of the subfamily Myxininae, and the Pacific hagfish, representative of the subfamily Eptatretinae, differ in that the latter has muscle fibers embedded in the skin
- Hagfish | Primitive, Slime-Producing, Eel-Like | Britannica
Eel-like in shape, hagfishes are scaleless, soft-skinned creatures with paired thick barbels on the end of the snout Depending on the species, they grow to about 40 to 100 cm (16 to 40 inches) long Primitive vertebrates, hagfishes have a tail fin (but no paired fins) and no jaws or bones
- 14 Fun Facts About Hagfish - Smithsonian Magazine
Although they are jawless, hagfish have two rows of tooth-like structures made of keratin that they use to burrow deep into carcasses They can also bite off chunks of food
- Hagfish: This Eel-like Slime Machine Is a Predators . . .
Hagfish are eel-like creatures known for producing a unique slime that can suffocate predators like sharks They lack jaws and instead use a tongue-like appendage lined with toothy rasps to feed
- Hagfish - Species, Classification, Habitat, Diet, Skeleton . . .
Hagfish, also known as slime eels, are eel-shaped, jawless fish belonging to the family Myxinidae of the class Myxini They are part of the superclass Cyclostomi, which also includes lampreys (another group of jawless fish), and thus are collectively classified as cyclostomes
- Hagfish Species Profile, Alaska Department of Fish and Game
Hagfish are bottom-dwelling, eel-shaped marine creatures Pacific and black hagfish are found in the waters off the coasts of the north Pacific; black hagfish are more common than the Pacific hagfish in the Inside Waters of southern Southeast Alaska
- Hagfish | Coastal and Marine Laboratory
Hagfishes (Myxinidae) represent the most basal and primitive "vertebrates" known, living or extinct Despite their evolutionary longevity, and at least 70 extant species distributed in most world oceans, there is still a dearth of knowledge of the life histories and ecology of most species
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