Yes, this fish has spines. Yes, this fish releases toxins. No, that’s
not the reason why you shouldn’t touch it, though. You’ll know why you
shouldn’t touch it when you find out what it has instead of scales.
The
mandarinfish has a few good qualities. It engages in a charming mating
dance. A male courts several females, until one decides she likes him,
at which point they pair off and do a kind of swim-dance together. The
fish is one of only two vertebrates that can produce a blue pigment.
Most blue-colored vertebrates just layer crystals until they create an
interference pattern in outgoing light that looks blue. This one
produces blue colored proteins and arranges them in stunning pattern
that makes it a favorite among people with home aquariums.
The
mandarinfish has a few less pleasing qualities. It has spines that will
stick the hand of anyone who tries to touch it, and it produces toxins
that can be dangerous — especially if they come in contact with open
wounds. But these are minor drawbacks. Its main drawback is that it
stinks. Every scientist and book that talks about the mandarinfish makes
mention of its strong, unpleasant smell. That stink is not incidental.
The mandarinfish needs the smell, and the spines, because it lacks one
of the most basic protective measures in the marine world: It doesn’t
have scales.
Any
predator that gets a hold of the fish will injure it a great deal. Its
best hope for survival is making itself so unappealing that nothing
wants to eat it. The smell helps ward predators off, but what about the
elements? The fish still has to deal with the dust and grit that it
swims through. It does so, by coating itself with a “thick layer of
mucus.”
Yep,
arguably the most beautiful fish in the ocean, and an anomaly of animal
pigmentation, goes around perpetually oozing thick, smelly snot, which
it uses to cover its entire body. And yes, some of the fish’s toxins are
mixed into its mucus coating. So if you do decide to observe these
animals mating underwater, and you feel sick later, you now know what
got in your mouth.
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