

One Oregon diver with the website (Candice Landau), said she rather fell in love with interacting with these creatures. Yet when in captivity or even in the wild, they get quite friendly with humans. “When caught accidentally in a fisherman’s net or crab trap, a startled wolf eel can put up quite a fight, thrashing around its 5- to 6-foot long body and mauling anything unfortunate enough to be seized in its powerful jaws,” Boothe said. Strangely, they have a truly adorable disposition with humans – except for one circumstance. At one point they become juveniles that like to hang out on the bottom, and then comes their sedentary stage as mature adults when they start reproducing.Īdults can grow to about five or six feet in length. At this stage, Stargate SG1 fans will immediately see a resemblance to the alien parasites that inhabit the main nemesis race of Go'auld in the first several seasons. Even when they’re fairly small, they have a vicious look to them with those gnarly teeth. Their life cycle shows them starting as planktonic larva, then moving to free-swimming juveniles. “At the age of two they leave their nomadic lifestyle for the comfort of the rocky ocean floor and essentially become ‘couch potatoes.’ After eating, these fish often rub themselves against the bottom of the ocean floor.” “Wolf eels start their lives out living in the upper part of the water column,” said Boothe. These creatures have a massive head and powerful jaws, which makes an ideal mechanism for chomping on their hard-shelled, preferred food of echinoderms, clams, crabs and other crustaceans, sand dollars, snails and sea urchins. They are a set of species of bottom-dwelling meat-eaters that like to hide on the floor of the ocean. “Don’t let this fish’s eel-like appearance (or name) fool you, true eels do not have fins,” said Tiffany Boothe with the Seaside Aquarium.Īccording to the Oregon Coast Aquarium, wolf eels are part of a group called the wolffishes – no kidding, that's a real name. Seaside Aquarium and Oregon Coast Aquarium have had plenty of them, and they’re a popular feature there. In the wild, however, it’s not really known how long they live. In aquariums, their lifespan can reach 20 years. They’re even at the Oregon Zoo in Portland. You’ll also regularly find them in aquariums on the West Coast, such as the Westport Aquarium, Seaside Aquarium, Oregon Coast Aquarium in Newport and the Charleston Marine Life Center in Coos Bay.

Their range is all over the Pacific Ocean, from Alaska down to California, so they’re definitely regulars along the shorelines of Washington and Oregon. Now, other wolf eels and their prey are another matter. There’s a lot of misconceptions about these creatures, but experts in the know are well aware the wolf eel seems to enjoy the company of humans. While they have a truly wacky, even angry face, the wolf eel is actually known as kind of a kitten of the deep. None of the above is true of the (believe it or not) rather cuddly Wolf Eel of the Oregon coast and Washington coast. Except for maybe a finger of yours as a side dish, if you try to feed it.

(Seaside, Oregon) – They’re grumpy and crusty looking, and they certainly appear as if they don’t like you. New amenities offered specials and tempting prices nowīig deals available lodgings not listed anywhere else Includes rentals not listed anywhere else Includes exclusive listings major specials now that winter is here Unique to the fish world, wolf eels mate for life, and the monogamous pair can usually be found hiding in their den together.Latest Coastal Lodging News Alerts In Seaside: Wolf eels have extremely powerful jaws and love to eat hard-shelled animals like sea urchins, crabs, and sand dollars. They are clearly distinguishable by their round, blunt heads, protruding lower jaw, and menacing-looking teeth. This fascinating species is touted as one of the ugliest fish in the sea. You can also find wolf eels on the east coast of Russia and south to the Sea of Japan. These coldwater marine fish can be found hiding in the caves, crevices, and rocky reefs along North America’s Pacific coast, from Baja California, Mexico north to Kodiak Island, Alaska. These long, skinny fish can grow quite large, reaching up to 2.5m (8.2 ft) long. The wolf eel is not an eel at all but one of five “wolffish“ species, having paired gill slits and pectoral fins.
