Online Encyclopedia

SUNFISH

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V26, Page 102 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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SUNFISH  , a name chiefly and properly applied to a marine

fish (Orthagoriscus) of the order Plectognathi, which by its large
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size,
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grotesque appearance and numerous peculiarities of organization has attracted the attention equally of fishermen as of naturalists . Only two
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species are known, the rough or short sunfish (O. mola), which is found in all seas of the temperate and tropical zones; and the smaller and scarcer smooth or oblong sunfish (O. truncatus), of which only a small number of specimens have been obtained from the
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Atlantic and
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Indian oceans . Sunfishes have the appearance of tailless fish . This is due to the extreme shortening of the caudal region which is sup-ported by only a few short vertebrae; the caudal fin is absent, what appears to be a tail being formed by the confluence of dorsal and ventral fins: pelvic fins are also wanting . The anterior parts of the dorsal and ventral fins are high and broad, similar to each other in size and triangular in form . The head is completely merged in the trunk, the boundary between them being indicated only by a very small and narrow gill-opening and a comparatively small
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pectoral fin . This fin can be of but little use in locomotion, and the
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horizontal and vertical movements of the fish, as well as the maintenance- of its
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body in a vertical position, are evidently executed by the powerful dorsal and anal fins . The small mouth, situated in front of the head, is armed with an undivided dental
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plate above and below, similar to but weaker than the teeth of the globe-fish (Diodon) . Sunfishes are truly pelagic, propagating their species in the Sunfish (Orthagoriscus mola) . open sea, and only occasionally approach the coast . During the stormy season they live probably at some
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depth, but in
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calm, bright weather they rise and rest or
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play on the
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surface with their dorsal fin high above the
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water . This habit has given rise to the popular name " sunfish," a
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term also sometimes applied to the basking-
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shark .

In. some years the rough sunfish is by no means scarce on the

south coast of England and on the Irish. coasts, where it appears principally in the summer months . The usual size is from 3 to 4 ft. in length, but this species attains to 7 ft. and more . One of the largest specimens (shown in the figure) was caught near Portland (Dorsetshire) in 1846, and is now in the
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British Museum; its length is 7 ft . 6 in . The sunfish has no economic value, and is rarely, if ever, eaten . Whilst the rough sunfish has a granulated, rough, shagreenlike skin, the second species (O. truncatus) has the surface of the body smooth and polished, with its small dermal scutes arranged in a tesselated fashion . • It is oblong in shape, the body being much longer than it is deep . The sides are finely ornamented with transverse silvery, black-edged stripes
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running downwards to the
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lower
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part of the abdomen . It has not been found to exceed a ft. in length . Only a few specimens have been captured on the coasts of
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Europe, at the Cape of Good Hope and off
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Mauritius .

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