Ankang fish This kind of marine fish mainly lives in New Zealand and some South Pacific islands. This kind of fish likes to live in the sand, hiding itself at the bottom of the sand, with its head and eyes sticking out, just like looking up at the starry sky, eating small fish, shrimps and insects that run over its head. This fish is so ugly that everyone is afraid of it. I caught one at first, but I let it go because I was afraid. I caught it again this time. I'm not afraid, but my friend said there was no need for such ugly fish. I said it was a rare treasure. This fish has a big mouth, face up, big head, big belly, eyes up, and a little body. Its hands and feet are comparable to those of the butterfly fish I mentioned above, but this guy has thick hands. I think it is used to dig sand. It has no scales, feels smooth, has transparent mucus on the skin surface, and has 15 spots on its stomach. I think that's why people call it Spot ... because it is also a member of the stargazer family. . . What surprises me most about this fish is not its ugly appearance, nor its tender and delicious meat, but its vitality. This guy's life is really hard I put it on the ground when I caught him at 3 pm, and at 7 pm, I was still alive as when I caught him. When I cleaned up everything in my stomach, I didn't have much, and I was emboldened. It is estimated that there is 1/3. It still moves like that after cleaning. I put it on the plate and jumped up. I was really afraid to turn my pot over and finally open its head to be quiet. This guy's head is empty. I really don't know what makes him so tenacious. This really shocked him. This guy's meat is the best I've ever eaten. Delicious and elastic, like frog thigh meat. I really don't know how to describe it. It is delicious. . . .
anglerfish
In the deepest Mariana Trench in the world, there are basically no conditions and possibilities for living things to exist. But in this deep sea, there is a kind of fish called Ankang, which lives happily, reproduces and reproduces from generation to generation.
Anchovies are not born with lanterns. When mating in adulthood, the male anchovies will attach to the stomach of the female anchovies and will not separate. Gradually, the dorsal fin of the female anchovies will grow lanterns to prey, which will become larger and larger, while the weak male anchovies will stop growing. Because of the long-term adsorption, the male and female anchovies will eventually merge into one.
Reference:/blog/user1/fishingman/archives/2007/1561.html
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