No one can figure out how eels have sex Lucy Cooke

From Ancient Greece to the 20th century,

Aristotle, Sigmund Freud,
and numerous other scholars

were all looking for the same thing:

eel testicles.

Freshwater eels, or Anguilla Anguilla,
could be found in rivers across Europe,

but no one had ever seen them mate.

And despite countless dissections,

no researcher could find eel eggs
or identify their reproductive organs.

Devoid of data, naturalists proposed
various eel origin stories.

Aristotle suggested that eels
spontaneously emerged from mud.

Pliny the Elder argued eels
rubbed themselves against rocks,

and the subsequent scrapings
came to life.

Eels were said to hatch on rooftops,
manifest from the gills of other fish,

and even emerge
from the bodies of beetles.

But the true story of eel reproduction
is even more difficult to imagine.

And to solve this slippery mystery,

scholars would have to rethink
centuries of research.

Today, we know the freshwater eel
lifecycle has five distinct stages:

larval leptocepheli, miniscule glass eels,
adolescent elvers,

older yellow eels, and adult silver eels.

Given the radical physical differences
between these phases,

you’d be forgiven for assuming
these are different animals.

In fact, that’s exactly what
European naturalists thought.

Researchers were aware of leptocepheli
and glass eels,

but no one guessed they were related
to the elvers and yellow eels

living hundreds of kilometers upstream.

Confusing matters more, eels don’t
develop sex organs until late in life.

And the entirety of their time
in the rivers of Europe

is essentially eel adolescence.

So when do eels reproduce,
and where do they do it?

Despite its name, the life
of a freshwater eel actually begins

in the salty waters
of the Bermuda Triangle.

At the height of the annual
cyclone season,

thousands of three-millimeter eel larvae

drift out of the Sargasso Sea.

From here, they follow migration
paths to North America and Europe—

continents that were
much closer

when eels established these routes
40 million years ago.

Over the next 300 days, Anguilla Anguilla
larvae ride the ocean currents

6,500 km to the coast of Europe—

making one of the longest
known marine migrations.

By the time they arrive, they’ve grown
approximately 45 mm,

and transformed into semi-transparent
glass eels.

It’s not just their appearance
that’s changed.

If most marine fish entered
brackish coastal waters,

their cells would swell with freshwater
in a lethal explosion.

But when glass eels reach the coast,

their kidneys shift to retain more salt

and maintain their blood’s
salinity levels.

Swarms of these newly freshwater
fish migrate up streams and rivers,

sometimes piling on top of each other
to clear obstacles and predators.

Those that make it upstream develop
into opaque elvers.

Having finally arrived
in their hunting grounds,

elvers begin to eat everything
they can fit into their mouths.

These omnivores grow in proportion
to their diets,

and over the next decade they develop
into larger yellow eels.

In this stage, they grow
to be roughly 80 cm,

and finally develop sexual organs.

But the last phase of eel life—
and the secret of their reproduction—

remains mysterious.

In 1896, researchers identified
leptocepheli as larval eels,

and deduced that they had come
to Europe from somewhere in the Atlantic.

However, to find this mysterious
breeding ground,

someone would have to perform
an unthinkable survey of the ocean

for larvae no larger than 30mm.

Enter Johannes Schmidt.

For the next 18 years,
this Danish oceanographer

trawled the coasts of four continents,

hunting down increasingly
tiny leptocepheli.

Finally, in 1921, he found
the smallest larvae yet,

on the southern edge
of the Sargasso Sea.

Despite knowledge
of their round trip migration,

scientists still haven’t observed
mating in the wild,

or found a single eel egg.

Leading theories suggest
that eels reproduce

in a flurry of external fertilization,

in which clouds of sperm
fertilize free-floating eggs.

But the powerful currents
and tangling seaweed of the Sargasso Sea

have made this theory
difficult to confirm.

Researchers don’t even know where to look,

since they’ve yet to successfully
track an eel

over the course of its return migration.

Until these challenges can be met,

the eel’s ancient secret will continue
to slip through our fingers.

从古希腊到 20 世纪,

亚里士多德、西格蒙德·弗洛伊德
和许多其他学者

都在寻找同一个东西:

鳗鱼睾丸。

淡水鳗鱼或安圭拉安圭拉
可以在欧洲的河流中找到,

但没有人见过它们交配。

尽管进行了无数次解剖,但

没有研究人员能够找到鳗鱼卵
或识别它们的生殖器官。

在缺乏数据的情况下,博物学家提出了
各种鳗鱼起源的故事。

亚里士多德认为鳗鱼会
自发地从泥浆中冒出来。

老普林尼认为,鳗鱼会
在岩石上摩擦自己

,随后的刮痕
变得生动起来。

据说鳗鱼在屋顶孵化,
从其他鱼的鳃中显现,

甚至
从甲虫的身体中出现。

但鳗鱼繁殖的真实故事
更难以想象。

为了解决这个棘手的谜团,

学者们必须重新思考
几个世纪的研究。

今天,我们知道淡水鳗鱼的
生命周期有五个不同的阶段:

幼虫 leptocepheli、微小的玻璃鳗鱼、
青春期的鳗鱼、

年长的黄鳗和成年银鳗。

鉴于这些阶段之间存在根本性的物理差异

您可以原谅假设
这些是不同的动物。

事实上,这正是
欧洲博物学家的想法。

研究人员知道细头鱼
和玻璃鳗,

但没有人猜到它们与

生活在上游数百公里的精灵和黄鳗有关。

更令人困惑的是,鳗鱼
直到晚年才会发育出性器官。

他们
在欧洲河流中的全部时间

基本上都是鳗鱼的青春期。

那么鳗鱼什么时候繁殖
,它们在哪里繁殖呢?

尽管它的名字,
淡水鳗鱼的生活实际上开始


百慕大三角的咸水。

在一年一度的
飓风季节高峰期,

数千条三毫米长的鳗鱼幼虫会

从马尾藻海中漂出。

从这里开始,它们沿着迁徙
路径前往北美和欧洲——当鳗鱼在 4000 万年前建立这些路线时

,这两个大陆
更接近

在接下来的 300 天里,安圭拉安圭拉
幼虫沿着洋流

6,500 公里到达欧洲海岸,

这是已知最长的
海洋迁徙之一。

当它们到达时,它们已经长了
大约 45 毫米

,变成了半透明的
玻璃鳗鱼。

改变的不仅仅是他们的
外表。

如果大多数海鱼进入
咸水沿海水域,

它们的细胞会因淡水而膨胀
,发生致命的爆炸。

但是当玻璃鳗鱼到达海岸时,

它们的肾脏会转移以保留更多的盐分

并维持血液中的
盐度水平。

成群结队的这些新
淡水鱼沿着溪流和河流迁徙,

有时会堆积在一起
以清除障碍物和捕食者。

那些让它上游发展
成不透明的精灵。

终于
到达他们的狩猎场后,

精灵们开始吃掉
所有能塞进嘴里的东西。

这些杂食动物与
它们的饮食成比例地生长

,在接下来的十年里,它们会长
成更大的黄鳗。

在这个阶段,它们长
到大约80厘米

,最后发育出性器官。

但是鳗鱼生命的最后阶段——
以及它们繁殖的秘密——

仍然是个谜。

1896 年,研究人员将
leptocepheli 确定为幼体鳗鱼,

并推断它们是
从大西洋的某个地方来到欧洲的。

然而,要找到这个神秘的
繁殖地,

就必须
对海洋进行一次不可思议的调查,

寻找不超过 30 毫米的幼虫。

进入约翰内斯施密特。

在接下来的 18 年中,
这位丹麦海洋学家

在四大洲的海岸进行了拖网

捕捞,追捕越来越
小的细头鱼。

最后,在 1921 年,他在马尾藻海
的南部边缘发现了迄今为止最小的幼虫

尽管
知道它们的往返迁徙,但

科学家们仍然没有观察到
在野外交配,

也没有发现一个鳗鱼卵。

领先的理论表明
,鳗鱼

在一系列外部受精中繁殖

,其中精子云使
自由漂浮的卵受精。


马尾藻海强大的海流和纠缠不清的海藻

使这一理论
难以证实。

研究人员甚至不知道该去哪里寻找,

因为他们还没有成功地
追踪到鳗鱼

返回迁徙的过程。

在解决这些挑战之前

,鳗鱼的古老秘密将继续
从我们的指缝中溜走。