This would be the Herring King King Striped Bass? Longest body length: ?1,100cm (records found the longest 15M) Heaviest weight: ?272kg Habitat: Pacific Ocean, Indian Ocean, eastern Atlantic Ocean and the Mediterranean Sea Habitat depth: deep and 3,000 feet (914.4 meters) The king herring has a long mouth, they are usually in the feeding head up, like a strip of vertical on the seabed does not move, and wait for the food from the mouth when it swims past, it will When the food swims past its mouth, it will quickly extend its mouth and suck the food into its mouth. The king ribbonfish belongs to the order Moonfish, family King Ribbonfish, and there are two main types of king ribbonfish: the Leatherback King Ribbonfish and the King Herring King Ribbonfish. It is the longest bony fish in the ocean. The longest can grow up to 50 feet (15.2 m) and weigh 100 pounds (90.72 kg). Royal stripers are easily recognizable by their bodies, which are as silvery as those of stripers much smaller than them, and by a bright red dorsal fin that runs over the entire body. Their mouth, unlike that of the striped bass, is small and toothless. They use rows of gills to help suck crustaceans into their mouths. They live at depths of up to 3,000 feet and all the royal stripers known to come to the surface are sick or dying. However, some scientists believe they are so resilient that they can still live even with only the first half of their body left. Many believe that the great sea serpent in the legends of the ancient mariners came from the image of the royal ribbon fish.
[edit]Characteristics
The fish lives at depths of 50 meters to 200 meters, and has a long, ribbon-shaped body that is very compressed sideways, high in the front, and narrowing toward the back; the standard body length is about 17-24 times the height of the body. The head is small, and the back of the head above the eyes is steep and straight. Body smooth, naked and scale-free. Dorsal fin basally long, with limb 6?+?345-365, beginning above eye, anterior 6 fins extended; anal fin absent; ventral fin with only one extended filamentous limb with several membranous protrusions; caudal fin reduced, small and upturned, flabellate, with limb 4, lower lobe inconspicuous. Body silvery white, with many dark spots of different sizes on the side of the body. The morphology and taxonomic status of this species are still under investigation.[edit]Habits
The herring king ribbonfish is the largest bony fish in the world, with a body length of up to 12 meters, and some people claim to have seen a giant ribbonfish over 16 meters long, although this has not been confirmed. Its body is slender, from the head all the way to the tail has two rows of fine fins like oars, living in the deep sea about 1,000 meters below, very rare. Not much is known about this rare deep-sea "monster".[Edit Paragraph]Related Information
According to the Daily Telegraph, a Swedish oceanographic museum announced on May 11, 2010 that it had found a rare herring king ribbonfish off the west coast of Sweden, which was the first time such a giant fish had been found in Sweden in more than 130 years. The Herring King King Striped Bass was about 3.5 meters long, had a deep wound on its body, and its unique and beautiful dorsal fin was missing. The fish has now been frozen and preserved by the Swedish Seaquarium and is scheduled to be displayed at a sea monster exhibition this year. The Herring King Royal Striped Bass is the largest bony fish in the world, with a body length of up to 12 meters, and some people have claimed to have seen a giant royal striped bass that was more than 16 meters long, although this has not been confirmed. It has an elongated body with two rows of fins extending from the head to the tail that look exquisitely like oars, and is rare, living at depths of about 1,000 meters. The King Herring was last discovered in Sweden in 1879, and not much is known about this rare deep-sea "monster". However, it is said that the "Great Sea Serpent" and the "Loch Ness Monster", which have long terrorized sailors across Europe, are both references to the King Herring. Legend has it that its appearance brings earthquakes or tsunamis, and that it is an ominous messenger.