Home
Hagfishes
Chimaeras
Lampreys
Sharks and Rays
Ray-finned fishes
Anglerfishes
Beardfishes
Bichirs
Bonefishes
Bony tongues
Bowfins
Carps
Catfish
Characins
Clingfishes
Cods
Cusk eels
Dories
Eels and Morays
Flatfishes
Gars
Grinners
Halosaurs and deep-sea Spiny eels
Herrings
Jellynose fishes
Knifefishes
Lanternfishes
Lightfishes and Dragonfishes
Live bearers, Killifishes and Rivulines
Milkfish
Mullets
Needle fishes
Perch-like fish
Pikes and Mudminnows
Pipefishes and Seahorses
Pricklefishes, Bigscales and Gibberfishes
Puffers and Filefishes
Pygmy sunfishes
Salmons
Sawbellies
Scorpionfishes and Flatheads
Antarctic sculpins
Armored searobins or armored gurnards
Australian prowfishes
Baikal oilfishes
Barehead scorpionfishes
Cofishes
Deep-sea bristly scorpionfishes
Deep-water sculpins
Deepwater bullhead sculpins
Deepwater flatheads
Fatheads
Flatheads
Flying gurnards
Ghost flatheads
Greenlings
Grunt sculpins
Gurnard scorpionfishes
Lumpfishes
Orbicular velvetfishes
Poachers
Racehorses or pigfishes
Red velvetfish
Rockfishes, rockcods and thornyheads
Sablefishes
Scorpionfishes or rockfishes
Sculpins
Sea ravens or sailfin sculpins
Searobins
Snailfishes
Stinger flatheads
Stonefishes
Velvetfishes
Wasp fishes
Wasp scorpionfishes
Silversides
Smelts
Spiny eels
Sticklebacks and Seamoths
Sturgeons and Paddlefishes
Swallowers and Gulpers
Tarpons and Tenpounders
Toadfishes
Trout-perches, Pirate perches and Cavefish
Velifers, Tube-eyes and Ribbonfishes
Whalefishes
Lobe-finned fishes
Setting up your tank
DIY Fish Tank Stand
250L community aquarium
Contact Us
Find fish information
Find fish by area
Bigeye sculpin (Triglops nybelini) fish species and information / pictures of Bigeye sculpin - Triglops nybelini
Bigeye sculpin (Triglops nybelini) fish species information
Scientific Name
Triglops nybelini
Common Name
Bigeye sculpin
Biology
Maximum depth reported at 1270 m (Ref. 58426). Commonly occurs between 200 and 600 m on silty or muddy bottoms at temperatures ranging from -0.1?C to -1.8?C and salinities ranging from 34.8 to 34.9 ppt. (Ref. 7297). Benthic; feeds on crustaceans (Ref. 58426).
Classification
Classified By
Jensen, 1944
Class
Ray-finned fishes (Actinopterygii)
Order
Scorpionfishes and Flatheads (Scorpaeniformes)
Family
Sculpins (Cottidae)
Distribution
Region
North Atlantic
Distribution
North Atlantic: found only along the east and west coasts of Greenland and at Jan Mayen and very occasionally in Ungava Bay and on the Labrador coast in Canada.
Range
80°N - 41°N, 70°W - 24°E
Environment
Climate
Polar
Water Temperature From
Unknown
°C
Water Temperature To
Unknown
°C
Depth From - meters
71
m
Depth To - meters
1270
m
Zone
demersal
Environment
Marine; demersal; depth range 71 - 1270 m (Ref. 58496), usually 200 - 600 m (Ref. 5951)
Trophic Level
3.29 s.e. 0.41 Based on diet studies.
Occurs in Marine / Salt water
True
Occurs in Brackish water
False
Occurs in Fresh Water
False
Occurs on Reefs
False
Is kept in Aquariums
False
Physical Size and Genetics
Maximum Length
20.0
cm
Common Length
Unknown
cm
Phylogenetic Diversity Index
PD50 = 0.5010 many relatives (e.g. carps) 0.5 - 2.0 few relatives (e.g. lungfishes)
Human Uses and Population
Human Uses
Fisheries: of no interest
Vulnerability
Moderate vulnerability (43 of 100)
Resilience
Medium, minimum population doubling time 1.4 - 4.4 years (Preliminary K or Fecundity.)
Threat To Humans
Harmless
IUCN Red List Status
Not Evaluated