Spanish researchers recently shared images of a deep-sea anglerfish swimming horizontally in shallow waters, capturing a rare moment with a fish not often seen by humans.
This is a first: last January, a creature from the abyss emerged from the shadows and rose to the surface off the coast of ...
Humpback anglerfish typically are found at depths of up to 1,500 meters below the water's surface, where there is little to ...
The marine photographer who captured the footage said it could be the world's first recorded sighting of a black seadevil ...
Recently, a few miles off the coast of Tenerife, in the Canary Islands, a rarely-seen sea creature emerged from the ocean’s ...
A scary-looking creature with “devil” in its name was spotted close to the surface off Tenerife, a Spanish island.
According to the organization, the fish is a so-called “black seadevil” known by its scientific name Melanocetus johnsonii. They typically swim between 650 and 6,500 feet below the ocean’s surface.
Researchers discovered the deep sea creature in Spain’s Canary Islands, capturing footage of it in broad daylight for the ...
The scary-looking fish is usually to be found more than a mile below the surface, where little to no light penetrates.
Scientists capture a black sea devil anglerfish near Spain's Canary Islands, marking the first-ever daylight sighting of this deep-sea predator.
For the first time, a deep sea angler fish was spotted last week in daylight. The incident was iconic, especially for the shark research organization Condrik Tenerife.