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Range: Globally, temperate seas
Anatomy: Jaws absent, no bones. Body naked, eel-like. 1-16 pairs of external gill openings. No paired fins, no dorsal fin. Part of caudal fin extends onto dorsal surface. Degenerate eyes. Biting mouth bearing barbels. Teeth only on tongue plus one on 'palate'. Mucous pores in 2 ventrolateral lines, each line with about 70-200 glands containing mucous cells and thread cells. Ovaries and testes in same individual but functionally non-hermaphroditic. About 80 cm max length. myx- (gr.) = slime
Commentary: Hagfish, common name for any of several eel-like, parasitic fishes found in temperate seas. They are the most primitive of the craniate chordates. Hagfishes are boneless animals with a circular, jawless mouth surrounded by sensing tentacles. The roof of the mouth contains a single tooth; the muscular tongue has two rows of strong, pointed teeth. The hagfish attaches its mouth to a fish and files through the flesh with its rasping tongue. Hagfishes also scavenge the flesh of dead fish and eats marine invertebrates.
Hagfish are almost blind, but have well developed senses of touch and smell. By far, the largest part of their diet is polychaete worms, but because of their slow metabolism, hagfish may go for up to seven months without eating any food.
Unlike many other fish, the Myxini undergo direct development, with no larval stage. The newly hatched young are practically miniature versions of their parents. Young are hermaphroditic at first, bearing both sets of sex organs; later in life, they will be either male or female, but may change sex from season to season.
Hagfish eggs are approximately one inch long, and encased in a tough shell. These eggs are large for a fish, and a female can therefore not produce very many. Despite the low number of eggs laid, hagfish exist in large numbers, with populations of up to 15,000 occurring in a relatively small area. This suggests that hagfish have a low mortality rate.
The Myxini are unique among living chordates in that they have a partial cranium (skull), but no vertebrae, and so they are not truly vertebrates. The skeleton is composed of cartilage, and lacks bone. Hagfish also lack jaws, and for this reason were long classified together with the lampreys in a group called the Agnatha ("no jaws") or the Cyclostomata ("round mouth"). Jawlessness is the primitive state for fish however, and so any such group based on a lack of jaws is paraphyletic. View a cladogram of the groups of basal vertebrates for better understanding.
The only fossil hagfish is Myxinikela siroka, a Pennsylvanian find from the Francis Creek Shale of northeastern Illinois (Bardack, 1991). The fossil was found within a siderite (iron carbonate) concretion, and preserves the paired tentacles, internal organs, and detail of the head and jaws. The similarity to modern hagfishes is striking, and suggests that there has been little evolutionary change in this group over the last 300 million years. A similar fossil from the same strata, Gilpichthys, has been tentatively included with the hagfish, but lacks the distinctive tentacles of all other species.
Before the discovery of Myxinikela, there was much speculation concerning the relationship of the Myxini to other fish. With no fossils known, it was suggested that they were secondarily reduced and closely related to the Petromyzontiformes (lampreys). Even though evidence of their truly basal position was known (Stensiö, 1968), the lack of fossils made it difficult for people who study fish evolution to accept that the Myxini could have evolved so long ago. More complex fish show up as far back as 400 million years ago, so why weren't there any hagfish fossils? This story demonstrates that a lack of known fossils does not necessarily mean that a group is very young, and that a single fossil can be both very important and very persuasive.
As of August, 2000, there are 58 known species.
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Latin Name
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Author
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Common Name
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Eptatretus atami
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Dean, 1904
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Brown hagfish
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Eptatretus bischoffii
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Schneider, 1880
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Eptatretus burgeri
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Girard, 1855
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Inshore hagfish
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Eptatretus caribbeaus
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Fernholm, 1982
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Eptatretus carlhubbsi
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McMillan & Wisner, 1984
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Eptatretus cheni
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Shen & Tao, 1975
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Eptatretus chinensis
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Kuo & Mok, 1994
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Eptatretus cirrhatus
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Forster, 1801
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Eptatretus deani
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Evermann & Goldsborough, 1907
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Black hagfish
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Eptatretus eos
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Fernholm, 1991
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Eptatretus fernholmi
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Kuo, Huang & Mok, 1994
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Eptatretus fritzi
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Wisner & McMillan, 1990
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Eptatretus grouseri
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McMillan, 1999
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Eptatretus hexatrema
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Müller, 1836
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Sixgill hagfish
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Eptatretus indrambaryai
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Wongratana, 1983
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Eptatretus laurahubbsae
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McMillan & Wisner, 1984
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Eptatretus longipinnis
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Strahan, 1975
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Eptatretus mcconnaugheyi
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Wisner & McMillan, 1990
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Eptatretus mendozai
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Hensley, 1985
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Eptatretus minor
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Fernholm & Hubbs, 1981
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Eptatretus multidens
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Fernholm & Hubbs, 1981
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Eptatretus nanii
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Wisner & McMillan, 1988
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Eptatretus nelsoni
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Kuo, Huang & Mok ,1994
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Eptatretus octatrema
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Barnard, 1923
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Eightgill hagfish
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Eptatretus okinoseanus
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Dean, 1904
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Eptatretus polytrema
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Girard, 1855
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Fourteen-gill hagfish
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Eptatretus profundus
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Barnard, 1923
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Fivegill hagfish
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Eptatretus sheni
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Kuo, Huang & Mok, 1994
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Eptatretus sinus
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Wisner & McMillan, 1990
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Eptatretus springeri
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Bigelow & Schroeder, 1952
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Gulf hagfish
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Eptatretus stoutii
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Lockington, 1878
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Pacific hagfish
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Eptatretus strahani
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McMillan & Wisner, 1984
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Eptatretus taiwanae
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Shen & Tao, 1975
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Eptatretus wisneri
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Kuo, Huang & Mok , 1994
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Eptatretus yangi
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Teng, 1958
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Myxine affinis
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Günther, 1870
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Patagonian hagfish
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Myxine australis
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Jenyns, 1842
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Myxine capensis
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Regan, 1913
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Cape hagfish
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Myxine circifrons
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Garman, 1899
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Whiteface hagfish
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Myxine debueni
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Wisner & McMillan, 1995
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Myxine dorsum
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Wisner & McMillan, 1995
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Myxine fernholmi
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Wisner & McMillan, 1995
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Myxine garmani
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Jordan & Snyder, 1901
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Myxine glutinosa
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Linnaeus, 1758
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Hagfish
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Myxine hubbsi
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Wisner & McMillan, 1995
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Myxine hubbsoides
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Wisner & McMillan, 1995
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Myxine ios
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Fernholm, 1981
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White-headed hagfish
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Myxine knappi
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Wisner & McMillan, 1995
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Myxine limosa
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Girard, 1859
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Myxine mccoskeri
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Wisner & McMillan, 1995
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Myxine mcmillanae
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Hensley, 1991
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Myxine paucidens
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Regan, 1913
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Myxine pequenoi
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Wisner & McMillan, 1995
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Myxine robinsorum
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Wisner & McMillan, 1995
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Nemamyxine elongata
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Richardson, 1958
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Nemamyxine kreffti
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McMillan & Wisner, 1982
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Neomyxine biniplicata
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Richardson & Jowett, 1951
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Notomyxine tridentiger
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Garman, 1899
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