{{Short description|Family of fishes}} {{Automatic taxobox | name = Cusk-eel | fossil_range = {{fossil range|Maastrichtian|present}} | image = Spectrunculus grandis.jpg | image_caption = Pudgy cusk-eel (''Spectrunculus grandis'') | taxon = Ophidiidae | authority = Rafinesque, 1810 | subdivision_ranks = Subfamilies | subdivision = See text }}
The '''cusk-eel''' family, '''Ophidiidae''', is a group of marine bony fishes in the Ophidiiformes order. The scientific name is from the Greek ''ophis'' meaning "snake", and refers to their eel-like appearance. True eels diverged from other ray-finned fish during the Jurassic, while cusk-eels are part of the Percomorpha clade, along with tuna, perch, seahorses, and others.
The oldest fossil cusk-eel is ''Ampheristus'', a highly successful genus with numerous species that existed from the Late Cretaceous (Maastrichtian) to the early Oligocene.<ref name=":02">{{Cite journal |last1=Schwarzhans |first1=Werner |last2=Stringer |first2=Gary L. |date=2020-05-06 |title=Fish Otoliths from the Late Maastrichtian Kemp Clay (Texas, Usa) and the Early Danian Clayton Formation (Arkansas, Usa) and an Assessment of Extinction and Survival of Teleost Lineages Across the K-Pg Boundary Based on Otoliths |url=https://riviste.unimi.it/index.php/RIPS/article/view/13425 |journal=Rivista Italiana di Paleontologia e Stratigrafia |language=en |volume=126 |issue=2 |doi=10.13130/2039-4942/13425 |issn=2039-4942}}</ref><ref name=":2">{{Cite web |title=PBDB |url=https://paleobiodb.org/classic/basicTaxonInfo?taxon_no=35660 |access-date=2024-02-16 |website=paleobiodb.org}}</ref>
== Distribution == Cusk-eels live in temperate and tropical oceans throughout the world. They live close to the sea bottom, ranging from shallow water to the hadal zone. One species, ''Abyssobrotula galatheae'', was recorded at the bottom of the Puerto Rico Trench, making it the deepest recorded fish at {{convert|8370|m|ft|abbr=on}}.<ref name="EoF">{{cite book |editor1=Paxton, J.R. |editor2=Eschmeyer, W.N. |author= Nielsen, Jørgen G.|year=1998|title=Encyclopedia of Fishes|publisher= Academic Press|location=San Diego|page= 134|isbn= 0-12-547665-5}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=What is the deepest-living fish? |url=http://australianmuseum.net.au/what-is-the-deepest-living-fish |work=Australian Museum |date=23 December 2014 |access-date=18 September 2015 }}</ref>
== Ecology == Cusk-eels are generally very solitary in nature, but some species have been seen to associate themselves with tube worm communities.<ref name=":0">{{Cite web|title=Ophidiiformes (Cusk-Eels and Relatives) {{!}} Encyclopedia.com|url=https://www.encyclopedia.com/environment/encyclopedias-almanacs-transcripts-and-maps/ophidiiformes-cusk-eels-and-relatives|access-date=2021-04-27|website=www.encyclopedia.com}}</ref> Liking to be hidden when they are not foraging, they generally associate themselves within muddy bottoms, sinkholes, or larger structures that they can hide in or around, such as caves, coral crevices, or communities of bottom-dwelling invertebrates, with some parasitic species of cusk-eel actually living inside of invertebrate hosts, such as oysters, clams and sea cucumbers.<ref name=":0" /> Cusk-eels generally feed nocturnally, preying on invertebrates, crustaceans and other small bottom-dwelling fishes.
== Phylogeny == Due to the inconsistencies in specific morphological characteristics in closely related species, attempts to use different characteristics, such as the position of pelvic fins, to classify Ophiididae into distinct families have proven highly unsatisfactory. Overall, Ophidiidae are classified based on whether or not they practice viviparity and the structures they contain that are associated with bearing life.<ref name=":0" />
== Characteristics == Cusk-eels are characterized by a long, slender body that is about 12–13 times as long as it is deep. The largest species, ''Lamprogrammus shcherbachevi'', grows up to {{convert|2|m|ft|abbr=on}} in length{{Citation needed|date=April 2025|reason=No source, fish base and most sources state 193cm}}, but most species are shorter than {{convert|1|m|ft|abbr=on}}. Their dorsal and anal fins are typically continuous with the caudal fin (with exception to a few species), forming a long, ribbon like fin around the posterior of the cusk-eel's body.<ref name=":1">{{Cite book|last=Bigelow|first=Andrew|title=Bigelow and Schroeder's fishes of the Gulf of Maine|publisher=Smithsonian Institution Press|year=2002|location=Washington, DC}}</ref> This caudal fin will often be seen to be reduced to a fleshy or bony point, especially when confluent with the dorsal and anal fins. The dorsal fin to anal fin ray ratio is approximately 1.5:1, leading to the dorsal fin typically being longer than the anal. The pectoral fins of cusk-eels are typically longer than the length of their head. Unlike true eels of the order Anguilliformes, cusk-eels have ventral fins that are developed into a forked barbel-like organ below the mouth. In true eels by contrast, the ventral fins are never well-developed and usually missing entirely.<ref>{{FishBase family|family=Ophidiidae|year=2006|month=February}}</ref> Cusk-eels have large mouths relative to their heads, with the upper jaw reaching beyond the eye, and paired nostrils on either side of the head. In cusk-eels, scales are potentially absent; when present, they are small.<ref name=":1" />
== Reproduction == Unlike their close relatives, the viviparous brotulas of the family Bythitidae, cusk-eel species are egg-bearing, or oviparous, organisms. While the specifics of the eggs of the family Ophidiidae are unknown, they are believed to be either spawned as individual, free-floating eggs in the open water or are placed in a mucilaginous raft, which will float for several days until they hatch into cusk-eel larvae. These larvae live amongst the plankton relatively close to the water's surface<ref name="EoF" /> and are believed to control their metamorphoses into adult cusk-eels, dispersing over greater distances into less utilized habitats and reducing competition in concentrated areas.<ref name=":0" />
== Conservation status == While a few species are fished commercially – most notably the pink cusk-eel, ''Genypterus blacodes'' – and several species of the order Ophidiiformes are listed as vulnerable, not enough information has been gathered about Ophidiidae as a whole to determine their conservation status.
==Genera== The cusk-eel family contains about 240 species, grouped into 50 genera:<ref name=":13">{{Cite web |last=Fricke |first=R. |last2=Eschmeyer |first2=W. N. |last3=Van der Laan |first3=R. |date=2025 |title=ESCHMEYER'S CATALOG OF FISHES: CLASSIFICATION |url=https://www.calacademy.org/eschmeyers-catalog-of-fishes-classification |access-date=2025-02-10 |website=California Academy of Sciences |language=en}}</ref>
* Genus †''Ampheristus''<ref name=":2" />
Subfamily Brotulotaenilinae * Genus ''Brotulotaenia'' Subfamily Neobythitinae {{div col|colwidth=20em}} * Genus ''Abyssobrotula'' * Genus ''Alcockia'' * Genus ''Apagesoma'' * Genus ''Barathrites'' * Genus ''Barathrodemus'' * Genus ''Bassogigas'' * Genus ''Bassozetus'' * Genus ''Bathyonus'' * Genus ''Benthocometes'' * Genus ''Dannevigia'' – Australian tusk * Genus ''Dicrolene'' * Genus ''Enchelybrotula'' * Genus ''Epetriodus'' – needletooth cusk * Genus ''Eretmichthys'' * Genus ''Glyptophidium'' * Genus ''Holcomycteronus'' * Genus ''Homostolus'' – filament cusk * Genus ''Hoplobrotula'' * Genus ''Hypopleuron'' – whiptail cusk * Genus ''Lamprogrammus'' * Genus ''Leptobrotula'' * Genus ''Leucicorus'' * Genus ''Luciobrotula'' * Genus ''Mastigopterus'' * Genus ''Monomitopus'' * Genus ''Neobythites'' * Genus ''Neobythitoides'' * Genus ''Penopus'' * Genus ''Petrotyx'' * Genus ''Porogadus'' * Genus ''Pycnocraspedum'' * Genus ''Selachophidium'' – Gunther's cusk-eel * Genus ''Sirembo'' * Genus ''Spectrunculus'' * Genus ''Spottobrotula'' * Genus ''Tauredophidium'' * Genus ''Tenuicephalus'' * Genus ''Typhlonus'' * Genus ''Ventichthys'' – East-Pacific ventbrotula * Genus ''Xyelacyba'' {{div col end}} Subfamily Ophidiinae {{div col|colwidth=20em}} * Genus ''Cherublemma'' – black brotula * Genus ''Chilara'' – spotted cusk-eel * Genus ''Genypterus'' * Genus ''Lepophidium'' * Genus ''Menziesichthys'' * Genus ''Ophidion'' * Genus ''Otophidium'' * Genus ''Parophidion'' * Genus ''Raneya'' – banded cusk-eel {{div col end}}
== Gallery == <gallery> File:Brotula multibarbata.jpg|''Brotula multibarbata'' (Brotulinae) File:Bassozetus normalis.jpg|''{{ill|Bassozetus normalis|qid=Q2683413}}'' (Neobythitinae) File:Lamprogrammus niger.jpg|''Lamprogrammus niger'' (Neobythitinae) File:Monomitopus agassizii.jpg|''Monomitopus agassizii'' (Neobythitinae) File:Porogadus miles.jpg|''Porogadus miles'' (Neobythitinae) File:Tauredophidium hextii.jpg|''Tauredophidium hextii'' (Neobythitinae) File:Otophidium omostigma.jpg|''Otophidium omostigma'' (Ophidiinae) </gallery>
==References== {{Commons category|Ophidiidae}} {{Wikispecies}} {{Reflist}}
{{Taxonbar|from=Q809481}} {{Authority control}}
Category:Ophidiidae Category:Taxa named by Constantine Samuel Rafinesque Category:Extant Maastrichtian first appearances