Eli the eel A mysterious migration James Prosek

Transcriber: Jessica Ruby
Reviewer: Caroline Cristal

They’re long and slithery,

and they’re not very colorful.

But they do have a strange beauty of their own.

Their sinuous, nocturnal movements

through the water

are mesmerizing to watch.

And though they may resemble underwater snakes,

eels are, in fact, a very interesting type of fish.

There are several things about eels

that make them unique

besides their elongated shape and limbless bodies.

For one thing,

eels have the ability to breathe through their skin.

Some can even leave the water

and move over land for short periods.

And, unlike most migratory fish,

such as salmon,

which spawn in fresh water

but live their adult lives in salt water,

eels of the genus Anguilla

migrate in the opposite direction,

spawning and breeding in oceans and seas,

while spending most of their intervening time

in fresh water.

If we were to take one such fresh water eel

and follow its life story,

it would be born in the middle of the North Atlantic Ocean,

about a thousand miles east of Bermuda.

This area, called the Sargasso Sea,

forms the western part

of a subtropical gyre,

a giant whirlpool in the middle of the ocean.

Our eel, let’s call it Eli,

would begin as one of ten to twenty million tiny eggs,

carried by a female eel,

hatching into a transparent leaf-shaped thing

that looks nothing like an adult eel.

Eli starts to drift in ocean currents,

predominantly the Gulf Stream

towards either Europe or North America,

depending on its particular species.

Upon reaching the coast,

Eli is about two inches long,

looking more eely but still transparent,

known at this stage as a glass eel.

But within a couple of days in fresh water,

Eli’s skin becomes pigmented a brownish-black,

now looking more like that of an adult eel.

You might notice

that we haven’t mentioned anything

about Eli’s gender yet.

That’s because this is only determined

once an eel enters fresh water,

though nobody is sure exactly how that happens.

Most of the eels that stay in the estuaries

and brackish water become males,

while those that go upstream become females,

growing up to two to three times bigger than

their future mates.

In this case,

it turns out that Eli was actually short for Elaine.

As a female eel,

Elaine will be quite solitary

for most of her life in the stream,

eating whatever falls in the water:

grasshoppers, crickets, small fish,

insect larvae, frogs, baby birds,

almost anything she can get her mouth around.

And she will grow quite big,

up to four feet long

and weighing as much as thirteen pounds.

We don’t know exactly how

fresh water eels know when it’s time

to return to the ocean,

but something calls to them.

And their fall migration

is one of the largest unseen migrations

on the planet.

As Elaine leaves fresh water for the ocean,

she undergoes a shocking metamorphosis.

Her eyes enlarge by about ten times,

her skin gets thicker,

and her fins get larger.

These are most likely adaptations

for their upcoming ocean travel,

and Elaine seamlessly makes the transition

from fresh to salt water,

which would be toxic for most other fish.

Once Elaine leaves the mouth of the fresh water streams,

she will disappear completely from human view.

No one has witnessed,

or been able to follow,

an adult eel on their migration,

nor do we know how deep they spawn.

But it’s assumed that they can follow some signs

that they can detect,

such as a thermal barrier between ocean currents

or a salinity front,

in order to return to the same area of the ocean

where they were born.

Because we don’t even know exactly

what happens during an eel’s migration,

we can only imagine what the actual breeding looks like.

But the common hypothesis

is that Elaine and thousands,

or hundreds of thousands,

of other eels

gather in large, intertwined masses

and release their eggs and sperm

in a giant orgy known as panmixia.

A couple of days after the eggs are laid,

they hatch,

and the cycle begins again.

And because we’ve never seen

the adult eels returning up the fresh water rivers,

we must assume that,

having completed their long and roundabout journey,

these amazing and mysterious creatures

finally die there,

in the same place where they were born.

Goodbye, Elaine!

It was a pleasure knowing you.

抄写员:Jessica Ruby
审稿人:Caroline Cristal

它们又长又滑,

而且颜色不是很鲜艳。

但他们确实有自己的奇异美。

它们在水中蜿蜒的夜间运动

令人着迷。

尽管它们可能类似于水下蛇,但

实际上鳗鱼是一种非常有趣的鱼。

除了细长的形状和无肢的身体外,鳗鱼还有几件事使它们与众不同。

一方面,

鳗鱼能够通过皮肤呼吸。

有些甚至可以离开水面

并在陆地上短暂移动。

而且,与大多数洄游鱼类不同,

例如鲑鱼,

它们在淡水中产卵

但成年生活在咸水中,

鳗鱼属的鳗鱼

向相反的方向迁移,

在海洋中产卵和繁殖,

同时大部分时间都在干预

在淡水中的时间。

如果我们拿一条这样的淡水鳗鱼

来了解它的生活故事,

它将出生在北大西洋中部,

百慕大以东约一千英里处。

这个区域被称为马尾藻海,

形成

了亚热带环流的西部,

这是海洋中部的一个巨大漩涡。

我们的鳗鱼,让我们称之为Eli

,最初是由雌鳗携带的一千万到两百万个小卵中

的一个,

孵化成透明的叶子状的东西

,看起来一点也不像成年鳗鱼。

Eli开始在洋流中漂流,

主要是墨西哥湾

流向欧洲或北美,

这取决于其特定的物种。

到达海岸后,

Eli 大约有两英寸长,

看起来更鳗鱼但仍然透明,

在这个阶段被称为玻璃鳗鱼。

但在淡水中几天后,

伊莱的皮肤变成了棕黑色,

现在看起来更像一条成年鳗鱼。

你可能会

注意到我们还没有

提到 Eli 的性别。

这是因为这只有

在鳗鱼进入淡水后才能确定,

尽管没有人确切知道这是如何发生的。

大部分留在河口

和微咸水中的鳗鱼变成雄性,

而上游的鳗鱼变成雌性,

长到比未来配偶大两到三倍

在这种情况下,

事实证明 Eli 实际上是 Elaine 的简称。

作为一条雌性鳗鱼,

伊莱恩

大部分时间都在溪流中独居,

吃掉落入水中的任何东西:

蚱蜢、蟋蟀、小鱼、

昆虫幼虫、青蛙、幼鸟,

几乎所有她能吃到的东西。

她会长得很大,

长达四英尺

,重达十三磅。

我们并不确切地知道

淡水鳗鱼是如何知道什么时候该

返回海洋的,

但是它们在召唤它们。

他们的秋季迁徙

是地球上最大的看不见的迁徙

之一。

当伊莱恩为海洋留下淡水时,

她经历了令人震惊的蜕变。

她的眼睛扩大了大约十倍,

她的皮肤变厚了

,她的鳍也变大了。

这些很可能

是他们即将到来的海洋旅行的适应,

而伊莱恩无缝地

从淡水过渡到咸水,

这对大多数其他鱼类来说都是有毒的。

一旦伊莱恩离开淡水溪流口,

她就会彻底从人类视野中消失。

没有人目睹

或能够

跟随成年鳗鱼的迁徙,

我们也不知道它们产卵的深度。

但假设他们可以跟随一些

他们可以探测到的迹象,

例如洋流之间的热障

或盐度前沿

,以便返回他们出生的同一海洋

区域。

因为我们甚至不知道

鳗鱼迁徙过程中究竟发生了什么,

我们只能想象实际的繁殖过程是什么样的。

但普遍的假设

是,伊莱恩和成千上万

或数十万

条其他鳗鱼

聚集成大块的、相互交织的团块

,并

在被称为 panmixia 的巨大狂欢中释放它们的卵子和精子。

产卵几天后,

它们孵化,

然后又开始循环。

而且因为我们从未

见过成年鳗鱼返回淡水河流,

我们必须假设,

在完成了漫长而迂回的旅程后,

这些神奇而神秘的生物

最终死在那里,

在它们出生的同一个地方。

再见,伊莱恩!

认识你很高兴。