Family : Chimaeridae
Text © Giuseppe Mazza
English translation by Mario Beltramini
The Spotted ratfish or Chimaera (Hydrolagus colliei Lay & Bennett, 1839) belongs, like the sharks, to the Class of the Chondrichthyes, the cartilaginous fishes, to the order of the Chimaeriformes, a group that has established, according to the fossils, about 300 million years ago, and to the family of the Chimaeridae counting only 2 genera (Chimaera and Hydrolagus) and 45 species present in the tropical and temperate waters of the Atlantic, Pacific and of Indian Oceans.
Legendary animals with big heads, profile of rabbit and very long tails, often similar to whips. Hence, in various languages, the recurring names of ratfishes and rabbit fishes or, due to the rather little macabre look, ghostly fishes.
The genus Hydrolagus, is born therefore, not by chance, from the Greek words“hydro” (ὕδρω) = water and “lagos” (λαγώς) = hare, whilst the species colliei honours the memory of the Scottish physician naturalist Alexander Collie.
Zoogeography
The Spotted ratfish lives along the north-eastern coasts of the American Pacific, mainly from south-western Alaska to California, but also in the coastal waters of Mexico and, further down, up to Costa Rica.
Ecology-Habitat
It prefers the sandy or muddy coasts, with temperatures between the 7 and 9 (12) °C. It has been fished even at 913 m of depth, but usually swims between the 50 and the 400 m. Along the coasts of California the divers meet it often around the 30 m and when looking for food it can be found in very shallow waters.
Morphophysiology
On the bronze reddish background colour we note numerous mimetic white spots. Like morays, the Spotted ratfish has no scales and unlike sharks the gills have a protective opening, as happens for the operculum in the bony fishes. The females, bigger than the males, reach with the tail, long as almost half the body, the length of 1 m.
Short and blunt, the snout has a rabbit profile with showy incisors and small mouth, but whilst the sharks lose often the teeth and renew them easily, here they are permanent dental plates, particularly solid for breaking the eventual armours of the preys. The Italian name of Chimera elefante (Chimaera elephant) perhaps considers the head, massive seen from the front and of the great triangular pectoral fins that recall the ears of the pachyderm.
The front edge of the dorsal fin has a venomous spine with clear dissuasive function: in the man it causes only painful injuries but kills the predators like the Common seal (Phoca vitulina), opening in the oesophagus or in the stomach.
In the darkness, the big emerald green eyes, done for deep waters, reflect the light as those of the cats, and the males have on the front a particular tentacle with enlarged and wrinkly tip, a sort of club to hold the female during the mating that may last even 2 hours.
Ethology-Reproductive Biology
The Spotted ratfish hunts mainly during the night. Swimming slowly over the bottoms it localizes, mainly with the smell, the presence of crustaceans and bivalve molluscs that are at the base of its diet, completed by small fishes, worms and starfishes.
The females are oviparous like most of the sharks and lay even a thirty eggs per year. They are about 12 cm long, protected by a solid cylindrical case, and are emitted twice at a time with a very long labour that may last even 30 hours. They get out with a long filament that then keeps them attached to the mother, drooping, for 4-6 days.
When it breaks, the eggs fall on the bottom often sticking into the sand in vertical position.
The mother watches them from above for some day leaving them only when it sees that there are no predators around and are well integrated to the environment. The incubation lasts usually 5-10 months and the just newborns measure about 14 cm doubling in size in one year.
The Spotted ratfish is not directly menaced by the man because the flesh has an unpleasant taste and usually keeps far from the divers. It attacks them only if feeling menaced or for territorial reasons with the venomous spine erect giving proof of great agility as if it should be flying like a bird with twists and turns supported by those two big pectoral fins.
Keeping in mind the weak resilience, with a minimum doubling time of populations of 4,5-14 years, the species has now (2022) a fishing vulnerability index moderately high, marking 50 on a scale of 100.
Synonyms
Chimaera colliei Lay & Bennett, 1839; Chimaera neglecta Ogilby, 1888; Chimaera media Garman, 1911.