Blacksail snake mackerel explained

The blacksail snake mackerel (Thyrsitoides marleyi), known also as the black snoek, is a species of snake mackerel found in the Indo-Pacific from shallow water to a depth of at least 400m (1,300feet) where they appear to prefer slopes on seamounts and ridges. They are known for making diel vertical migrations to near-surface waters at night, feeding on fish, squid and crustaceans. This species reaches a total length of 2m (07feet) though most are around 1m (03feet). This species is of minor importance to local commercial fisheries.

It is at the only member of the genus Thyrsitoides, making the genus monotypic. However, a second extinct species, T. zarahoustrae Arambourg, 1967, is known from the Late Eocene-aged Pabdeh Formation of Iran and potentially the Early Oligocene of Romania.[1] [2]

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Notes and References

  1. Book: Muséum national d'histoire naturelle (France) . Notes et mémoires sur le Moyen-Orient . naturelle (France) . Muséum national d'histoire . 1966 . Muséum national d'histoire naturelle . t.8 (1966) . Paris.
  2. Web site: PBDB Taxon . 2024-12-04 . paleobiodb.org.