Myctophiformes: CL II A2
Unknown sp.




Egg diameter in µm |
Number of oil globules |
Diameter of oil globule in µm |
Yolk texture |
Perivitelline space |
Position of oil globule at hatch |
Gut length at eye- pigment stage |
Myomeres |
960-1125 |
1 |
190-205 |
clear |
narrow |
stern |
58% of NL |
40+ |
Egg: The characteristic spikes on this egg, its size, and the presence of a single, pale amber oil globule make it unmistakable. Incubation is about 48 hours (23°C).
Larva: The newly hatched larva is elongate, with eyes unpigmented, an unformed mouth, and a distinctive yellow pigment pattern that is clearly shown in C. The gut extends well past the yolk and oil globule (B, white arrow). The eyes and mouth are developed by day 5, when all yellow pigment has disappeared, and black pigment lines the notochord ventrally from above the gut to the notochord tip (D). B: 2 days, C: 3 days, D: 5 days.
Ikeda & Mito (1988) show a similar egg which they assign to Myctophiformes, while Shao et al (2001) illustrate three types, all with compound spikes, and all assigned to Myctophidae. The structure of the spikes is interesting as they are complexly engineered, well illustrated by Shao et al (2001), their image of which is reproduced here (E). This species appears to be their Myctophidae sp. 1 (pg 42). No larvae have yet been sequenced for DNA barcoding, but efforts are continuing. The egg has not been seen since September 2006.


Spawning was seen all year round off Park Rynie, although numbers were low (blue graph). Given that myctophids are offshore, deepwater fishes, the dominance in offshore samples of the Park Rynie linked samples (68%), is low, but numbers are also very low. See Section 7.3 and Table 1 of the Introductory Notes, for more information on the linked samples.
linked samples |
Offshore |
Inshore |
Eggs |
26 |
12 |
Hits |
7 |
6 |