A weird 7-foot fish with a face "only a mother could love" washed ashore in Oregon – and it's rarer than experts thought

A weird 7-foot fish with a face “only a mother could love” washed ashore in Oregon – and it’s rarer than experts thought

An “unusual” and “strange looking fish” washed up onto an Oregon coast earlier this month, shocking people with its gargantuan size. At first, experts thought it was just a “run of the mill ocean sunfish,” known by the scientific name Mola mola, but now, they’ve learned it’s something else — and rare. 

The Seaside Aquarium said in a Facebook post last week that the after photos of the massive 7.3-foot fish caused “quite a stir on social media,” New Zealand researcher Mariann Nyegaard believed it was a species that isn’t familiar to Oregon, but that she extensive experience with. The fish turned out to be a hoodwinker sunfish, which she “discovered and described” in research published in 2017.

Hoodwinkers were discovered “hiding in plain sight” in museum collections after 125 years of specimens being misidentified, according to the Australian Museum. Describing sunfish as “beautiful giants,” the museum says that the world’s largest bony fish can grow to be more than 4,400 pounds. 

recently washed ashore in California and one as far north as Alaska,” the Seaside Aquarium said. “This fish, hiding in plain sight, has most likely been seen/washed ashore in the Pacific Northwest before but was mistaken for the more common, Mola mola.” 

A hoodwinker sunfish was found at the University of California Santa Barbara’s Coal Oil Point Reserve in 2019, with one specialist calling it “the most remarkable organism I have seen wash up on the beach.” 

7-foot fish washed up on Southern California beach
The seven-foot fish washed up at UC Santa Barbara’s Coal Oil Point Reserve in Southern California in 2019. The mouth of the fish has a unique look, said Thomas Turner, an evolutionary biologist.

Courtesy of Thomas Turner


The aquarium said that it would keep the fish on Gearhart beach and that at the time of the posting, its body would “probably remain for a few more days, maybe weeks as their tough skin makes it hard for scavengers to puncture.” 

“It is a remarkable fish and the aquarium encourages people to go see it for themselves,” they added.

Li Cohen

Source: cbsnews.com