by | Oct 27, 2016 | 0 comments

Holy Mola! OGL Preserves DNA from the World’s Largest Bony Fish

There’s a fish that flaps its fins like a bird, eats jellies, and likes to sunbathe—and this month, Ocean Genome Legacy (OGL) received its valuable fully sequenced genome.

The ocean sunfish, the largest bony fish and one of the most bizarre species in the world, is named for its propensity to sunbathe, floating at the surface on its side to catch the sun’s rays. In some languages it is known as the moonfish, and its Latin name, Mola mola, comes from its millstone-like appearance. What makes the ocean sunfish such a valuable contribution to the OGL biorepository is its size and growth rate. Within a few years, an individual can grow from an ant-sized fry to a creature as tall as an African elephant and as heavy as a walrus. Lacking a tail fin, the sunfish uses its massive side fins to travel more than 10 miles per day and dive 2,000 feet to catch its favorite food, jellyfish.

OGL received the fully sequenced genome of the ocean sunfish, the world’s largest bony fish. Photo with modifications: Per-Ola Norman, Karen Arnold

Dr. Byrappa Venkatesh at the Institute for Molecular and Cell Biology A*STAR in Singapore, along with colleagues from the Chinese Academy of Sciences, sequenced the ocean sunfish genome to better understand its unique body structure and physiology. This genome sequence provides vital information about the fast growth rate, tail-less shape, and abnormally large size of the ocean sunfish, which can help research on fish biodiversity and perhaps even human and veterinary medicine.

With great new additions like this one, the OGL biorepository works with scientists around the globe to preserve valuable DNA samples that may lead to new cures and discoveries. If you would like to support our efforts, please consider making a gift.

Have you seen a living or stranded ocean sunfish in the wild? Report your sighting at Oceansunfish.org.

RECENT NEWS BRIEFS

Meet OGL’s new faces—and their new projects!

This month, OGL is welcoming a new postdoctoral fellow and two new co-op students! Did you know that some bacteria stab their competitors with poison darts? In her PhD research at UNC Chapel Hill, Dr. Lauren Speare showed how glowing symbionts use this strategy to...

New Tools for Teachers

Science teachers are awesome! Middle and high school teachers are on the front lines of science education, teaching a generation that not only can save our planet, but must. To do our small part to help these heroes, Ocean Genome Legacy and the Outreach Program at...

Mystery Fish Identified!

On a nighttime dive on a spectacular shallow reef in Cozumel, Mexico, underwater photographer Robert Stansfield spied something in the inky darkness he had never seen before: a tiny, transparent fish with bright markings, devilish eyes, and a gaping mouth...

Spooky Creatures at OGL!

It’s that time of year again, when werewolves, goblins, and vampires skulk in the shadows. This Halloween, we present some of the spookiest marine creatures lurking in the OGL collection! Barreleye (Macropinna microstoma) The barreleye must have a lot of role models,...

X