Site icon Poseidon's Web

Benthic & Pelagic Fishes: Defining Oceanic Lifestyles

Describing pelagic fishes is easy: They swim, feed and just hang out in the open ocean, a pretty consistent pattern across many ocean-going species. Describing benthic fishes is something else. They live at the bottom of the ocean but they go about their lives in a bunch of differing ways – above, on and sometimes in the seafloor. Some may engage in all three approaches.

A true benthic fish, a friendly yellowhead jawfish risks emerging from its burrow to pose for a headshot.

IF TOLSTOY HAD WRITTEN ABOUT MARINE LIFE, he might have said that all pelagic fishes are alike but each benthic fish is benthic in its own way.

To be clear, for easier discussion this post focuses on fishes – and particularly on reef fishes. But these terms apply to invertebrates as well – pelagic organisms like copepods, krill and bacteria, benthic ones like corals, sponges, crabs, clams, featherstars – and more copepods.

BONUS WORD FACTOIDS

DEFINING PELAGIC FISHES

Yellowfin Tunas: Definitively Pelagic fish

Pelagic fishes are the guys that race compulsively through the open ocean, away from land. Biologists describe them into two categories:

PELAGIC FISH DESIGN

DEFINING BENTHIC FISHES

As benthic ambush experts, scorpionfishes rely on colors and fleshy body parts to blend into the reef while they wait for unsuspecting prey to come within range.

Benthic refers to fishes and invertebrates that actually live at the seafloor – above it, on it or in it. They can be small, slender jawfishes and shrimp gobies that live in burrows in the sediment, pancake-flat flounders that patrol the seafloor, blue and brown chromis that station themselves above the corals.

Size, shape, fin anatomy and other body aspects play into reef fishes’ ability to maneuver safely in this environment, to dart into crevices, hover amidst the branches of rope sponges or find cover among sea plumes.

As examples, the flat bodies of flounders and stingrays minimize their profiles and aid them in burying themselves under the sand when they need to go into hiding. The fleshy appendages of scorpionfishes help them disappear into their surroundings. The more torpedo-shaped bodies and fins of grunts, snappers, damselfishes, chromis and wrasses give them the maneuverability to position themselves for feeding and to retreat into safe places and hide behind coral heads when needed.

TRUE BENTHICS & BENTHOPELAGICS

Naturalists categorize benthic fishes into two types:

True benthics, whose lifestyle plants them on and in the seafloor, have denser body masses. As larvae concerned with surviving as plankton in the water column, they tend to have swim bladders that assist them with buoyancy. But, as they morph into adults, the bladders disappear.

Benthopelagics maintain functional (and useful) swim bladders. Actually, most reef fish are benthopelagic. While they may appear to be free swimmers, their lives are tied to the reef habitat, and, once settled as larvae, many of them live their lives in surprisingly small territories.

 A TRUE BENTHIC FISH SAMPLER

TRUE BENTHIC FISH STRATEGIES INCLUDE:

A BENTHOPELAGIC FISH SAMPLER

BENTHOPELAGIC FISH STRATEGIES INCLUDE:

This short Poseidon’s Web video shows the diverse feeding strategies of several bottom-feeding benthopelagic fishes, including trunkfish, southern stingrays, goatfish and spotted eagle rays. Click on the screenshot to play.

MIXED STRATGIES

FOR THE ETYMOLOGICALLY OBSESSED:

PRINCIPAL SOURCES: Marine Biology, Peter Castro, Michael Huber; Marine Biology, An Ecological Approach, James Nybakken; Reef Fish Identification Florida, Caribbean, Bahamas, Paul Humann, Ned DeLoach; What are pelagic fish? Oxford Dictionary of Zoology, Michael Allaby, Oxford University Press; National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration; Demersal Fish, Benthic Fish, Tethys, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory; Benthos, Dictionary.com; Pelagic Fish, Demersal Fish, et al., Wikipedia.

Exit mobile version