Portsmouth Herald

Divers catch rare giant oarfish on video

- James Powel While the fish may have been inspiratio­n for the tales of sea monsters, there are no reports of encounters with oarfish resulting in harm.

A group of divers encountere­d a rare giant oarfish off the coast of Taiwan.

The viral video, originally published by diving instructor Wang Cheng-Ru in June, shows the group coming upon the deep-sea fish in shallow water off the coast of the Ruifang District on the northeast corner of the island.

Footage of a giant oarfish is rare, because they usually are found 200 to 1,000 feet below the surface.

Sightings of the glittering silver on its body are a sign of an impending disaster, according to legend. But the video shows that the oarfish encountere­d by the group appears to be wounded.

“Many amazing animals can be found off Taiwan’s northeast coast … but it was my first encounter with a giant oarfish,” Cheng-Ru told Newsweek.

The giant oarfish is a deep-sea dweller that normally lives at a depth of about 700 feet but has been found as deep as 3,280 feet.

Oarfish can be found around the globe in non-Arctic waters and are characteri­zed by their scaleless body covered in silvery guanine.

It is considered the longest bony fish in the world by Guinness World Records. In 1963, an oarfish caught in New Jersey was an estimated 50 feet long, and in 1885, a 600-pound specimen was caught in Maine.

The fish’s scientific name is Regalecus glesne. It earned its common name from its highly compressed and elongated body, according to the Florida Museum of Natural History.

Are oarfish dangerous?

Though the sightings of live oarfish are rare, those who see them are in little danger.

Oarfish do not have teeth and feed on plankton through gill rakers.

While the fish may have been inspiratio­n for the tales of sea monsters, there are no reports of encounters with oarfish resulting in harm.

Oarfish in mythology

According to Japanese folklore, oarfish sightings are an omen of an impending disaster.

The fish is called “ryugu no tsukai” – which translates to “messenger from the sea god’s palace” – and was believed to be the servant of the sea god Ryujin.

The legend says that the fish are sent from the palace to the surface to warn people of coming earthquake­s. Though there were sightings of the fish ahead of the 2011 Tohoku earthquake and Fukushima nuclear disaster, scientists believe the connection is spurious.

“There is no scientific evidence of a connection, so I don’t think people need to worry,” Hiroyuki Motomura, a professor of ichthyolog­y at Kagoshima University, told the New York Post. “I believe these fish tend to rise to the surface when their physical condition is poor, rising on water currents, which is why they are so often dead when they are found.”

 ?? NEWSFLARE/AP ?? Oarfish can be found around the globe in non-Arctic waters and are characteri­zed by their scaleless body covered in silvery guanine.
NEWSFLARE/AP Oarfish can be found around the globe in non-Arctic waters and are characteri­zed by their scaleless body covered in silvery guanine.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States