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{{Taxobox
{{Skiptotoctalk}}
| name = Coelacanth
{{Talkheader}}
| fossil_range = {{fossil range|Devonian|Cretaceous|latest=recent|PS=  (but extant)}}
{{ArticleHistory
| image = Coelacanth.png
|action1=GAN
| image_caption = ''[[Latimeria]] chalumnae''
|action1link=Talk:Death Note/Archive 4#GA
| status = CR
|action1date=23:01, 15 December 2006
| status_system = iucn3.1
|action1result=listed
| regnum = [[Animalia]]
|action1oldid=94591435
| phylum = [[Chordate|Chordata]]
|currentstatus=GA
| classis = [[Sarcopterygii]]
|topic=Langlit
| subclassis = '''Actinistia'''
}}
| infraclassis = '''Coelacanthimorpha'''
{{WikiProject Anime and manga|class=GA|importance=Mid|portal-featured=yes}}
| ordo = '''Coelacanthiformes'''
{{archive box|auto=yes}}
| ordo_authority = Berg, 1937
{{User:MiszaBot/config
| subdivision_ranks = Families
|maxarchivesize = 100K
|counter = 1
| subdivision =
See text.
|algo = old(30d)
|archive = Talk:Death Note/Archive %(counter)d
}}
}}


'''Coelacanth''' ({{pronEng|ˈsiːləkænθ}}, adaptation of Modern Latin ''Cœlacanthus'' > cœl-us + acanth-us from [[Ancient Greek|Greek]] κοῖλ-ος [hollow] + ἄκανθ-α [spine]) is the common name for an [[Order (biology)|order]] of [[fish]] that includes the oldest living [[Lineage (evolution)|lineage]] of [[gnathostomata]] known to date. The coelacanths, which are related to [[lungfish]]es and [[tetrapod]]s, were believed to have been [[extinction|extinct]] since the end of the [[Cretaceous]] period, until the first ''Latimeria'' specimen was found off the east coast of [[South Africa]], off the [[Chalumna River]] in 1938. (They are, therefore, a [[Lazarus taxon]].) Since 1938, ''Latimeria chalumnae'' have been found in the [[Comoros]], [[Kenya]], [[Tanzania]], [[Mozambique]], [[Madagascar]], and in [[iSimangaliso Wetland Park]], [[East London]] in [[South Africa]]. The second species, ''L. menadoensis'', was described from [[Sulawesi]], [[Indonesia]] in 1999.<ref>[http://www.pnas.org/cgi/content/abstract/96/22/12616 Reference for divergence dated on mitochondrial genome]</ref><ref>{{cite journal | last = Erdmann | first = Mark V. | authorlink = | coauthors = | title = An Account of the First Living Coelacanth known to Scientists from Indonesian Waters | journal = Environmental Biology of Fishes | volume = Volume 54 | issue = #4 | pages = 439–443 | publisher = Springer Netherlands | date = April 1999 | url = http://www.springerlink.com/content/u5143r02v5u7133j/ | doi = 10.1023/A:1007584227315 | id = 0378-1909 (Print) 1573-5133 (Online) | accessdate = 2007-05-18}}</ref>
== Rem being female... ==


==Natural history==
In one of the earlier episodes when Rem tells Misa Amane about how to kill another shinigami Misa says "Rem would you ever fall in love with me" and rem said "dont be ridiculous, you think you can kill me that easily". What proof is there that Rem is Female..?[[Special:Contributions/67.81.169.196|67.81.169.196]] ([[User talk:67.81.169.196|talk]]) 04:12, 28 July 2008 (UTC)


They first appeared in the [[Fossil|fossil record]] in the Middle [[Devonian]], about 410 million years ago.<ref>A fossil coelacanth jaw found in a stratum datable 410 [[mya (unit)|mya]] that was collected near Buchan in [[Victoria, Australia|Victoria]], [[Australia]]'s East Gippsland, currently holds the record for oldest coelacanth; it was given the name ''Eoactinistia foreyi'' when it was published in September 2006. [http://www.int.iol.co.za/index.php?set_id=1&click_id=31&art_id=qw1156833901231B223]</ref> Prehistoric species of coelacanth lived in many [[Body of water|bodies of water]] in Late [[Paleozoic]] and [[Mesozoic]] times.
: ''Death Note: How to Read 13'' - Her profile states that she is female. That is beside the point; Shinigami cannot have intercourse with one another, nor can they have intercourse with humans. [[User:WhisperToMe|WhisperToMe]] ([[User talk:WhisperToMe|talk]]) 04:34, 28 July 2008 (UTC)


Coelacanths are [[lobe-finned fish]] with the [[pectoral fin|pectoral]] and [[anal fin]]s on fleshy stalks supported by bones, and the tail or [[caudal fin]] [[Fish anatomy#Types of fins|diphycercal]] (divided into three lobes), the middle one of which also includes a continuation of the [[notochord]]. Coelacanths have modified [[Scale (zoology)#Cosmoid scales|cosmoid scales]], which are thinner than true cosmoid scales, which can only be found on extinct fish. Coelacanths also have a special electroreceptive device called a [[rostral organ]] in the front of the skull, which probably helps in prey detection. The small device also could help the balance of the fish, as echolocation could be a factor in the way this fish moves.
::Besides, as I recall, her being female is referenced multiple times throughout the anime (though I could be wrong, I never paid particularly close attention to this before). And for a bit of original research/personal interpretation, Rem always just struck me as a female character anyways. —[[User:Dinoguy1000|<span style="color: blue;">Dino</span>]][[User talk:Dinoguy1000|<span style="color: green; font-weight: normal;">guy</span>]][[Special:Contributions/Dinoguy1000|<span style="color: orange;">1000</span>]] 20:29, 28 July 2008 (UTC)


===Fossil record===
:::Rem is said to be female in the manga as well. [[Special:Contributions/88.161.129.43|88.161.129.43]] ([[User talk:88.161.129.43|talk]]) 05:31, 3 August 2008 (UTC)
Although now represented by only two known living [[species]], as a group the coelacanths were once very successful with many genera and species that left an abundant fossil record from the [[Devonian]] to the end of the [[Cretaceous]] period, at which point they apparently suffered a nearly complete extinction. It is often claimed that the coelacanth has remained unchanged for millions of years, but, in fact, the living species and even genus are unknown from the fossil record. However, some of the [[extinct species]], particularly those of the last known fossil coelacanth, the Cretaceous genus ''[[Macropoma]]'', closely resemble the living species.{{Fact|date=July 2007}} The most likely reason for the gap is the taxon having become extinct in shallow waters. Deep-water fossils are only rarely lifted to levels where paleontologists can recover them, making most deep-water taxa disappear from the [[fossil]] record. This situation is still under investigation by scientists.


==''Latimeria'' - the modern Coelacanth==
::::It specifically states her gender in, I believe, book seven, when Rem reveals herself to Misa in order to warn her about Kira; she says that she herself is female, and so understands Misa's feelings for Light very well. [[Special:Contributions/67.159.136.174|67.159.136.174]] ([[User talk:67.159.136.174|talk]]) 07:04, 21 September 2008 (UTC)
{{Taxobox

| name = Modern Coelacanths

| fossil_range = Recent
== Banishment in China ==
| status = CR

| status_system = iucn3.1
I removed this:
| image = Latimeria chalumnae01.jpg

| image_caption = ''Latimeria chalumnae''
''Some schools in [[Shenyang]], [[People's Republic of China]] have banned the [[manga]] after some of their students started to tease friends and teachers by altering a [[notebook]] to resemble a Death Note and writing their names in them. The newspaper ''Shenyang Night Report'' called ''Death Note'' "poison, creating wicked hearts". One major Chinese newspaper felt that the ban is an overreaction and is inappropriate.<ref name="shenyang">{{cite news|title=Death Note Stirs Controversy in China|url=http://www.animenewsnetwork.com/article.php?id=6111|accessdate=2006-11-07|date= 2006-02-06|work=Anime News Network}}</ref>''
| regnum = [[Animalia]]

| phylum = [[Chordate|Chordata]]
because of the poor quality of the reference. Which schools? Which national newspaper? and we should be linking to the newspapers themselves as well as animenewsnetwork. [[User:Theresa knott|Theresa Knott]] | [[User talk:Theresa knott|The otter sank]] 07:22, 5 August 2008 (UTC)
| classis = [[Sarcopterygii]]

| subclassis = [[Coelacanthimorpha]]
:Hi, Theresa. Sorry to join in so late, but I just saw your comment. I'm afraid I don't agree that the reference should be deleted so completely. Let me explain.
| ordo = [[Coelacanthiformes]]

| familia =[[Latimeriidae]]
:Here's the URL you gave for that reference: http://www.animenewsnetwork.com/article.php?id=6111. When it's clicked on, it takes you to a different website, http://www.animenewsnetwork.com/news/2005-02-06/death-note-stirs-controversy-in-china. (Both accessed August 27, 2008.) Your comment dates the second site 2006-02-06, but the date given on the one I get is 2005-02-06. Did you copy the 2006 incorrectly?
| genus = '''''Latimeria'''''

| genus_authority = [[James Leonard Brierley Smith|Smith]], 1939
:In any event, the second (2005) site is the earliest web reference I've found so far reporting that Death Note was banned in China. The following website confirms the 2005 date for the Shenyang ban.
| subdivision_ranks = [[Species]]

| subdivision =
:: "Death Note in China - Success or Disaster?" (2007-03-26). http://comipress.com/article/2007/03/26/1711. (Accessed August 27, 2008).
* ''L. chalumnae'' <small>([[Type (zoology)|type]])</small>

* ''L. menadoensis'' <small>Pouyaud ''et al.'', 1999</small>
: There are other Chinese-sourced websites that report on the ban, but they're dated up to two years later. For example:
}}

:: Xiao Jie. (2007-05-15) "Beijing publisher to ignore Beijing's ban of its horror story." http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2007-05/15/content_6103672.htm. (Accessed August 27, 2008).

:: "'Death Note' website shuts down; creepy Chinese youth seek new ways to be morbid." (2007-07-22). http://shanghaiist.com/2007/07/22/shanghai_portal.php. (Accessed August 27, 2008).

:: "Chinese Students Fight Back at Death Note Ban." (2007-06-05). http://comipress.com/news/2007/06/05/2067. (Accessed August 27, 2008).

: The third of these gives additional details that are themselves sourced to http://edu.qq.com/ = a Chinese language website. Other, non-Chinese language websites also discuss the ban, including

:: MacDonald, Heidi (2007-05-15). "DEATH NOTE banned in Beijing." http://pwbeat.publishersweekly.com/blog/2007/05/15/death-note-banned-in-beijing-2/. (Accessed August 28, 2008). [Don't be concerned by the word "blog" in the URL; MacDonald is a regular columnist at [[Publisher's Weekly]].]

:: Katayama, Lisa (2008-05-19). "Death Note Manga Spawns Movie, Crime Wave." http://www.wired.com/entertainment/hollywood/news/2008/05/death_note. (Accessed August 27, 2008). [This is a more general discussion of crimes that seem associated with ''Death Note.'']

: A good many more websites mention the ban, and some of them have extensive comments by fans and other writers. If anyone wants, I'll post the URLs.

: Let me make a more general comment or two. I don't read Chinese, and citing the original news sources (as you suggested doing when you removed the reference) won't do me any good, nor anyone else who can't read Chinese. We are stuck, unfortunately, with translations and repetitions on other sources.

: Are those other sources reliable? Some are, like ANN, Publisher's Weekly, and Wired. The others might, for all I know, be less reliable (though I cannot attest to that), but they confirm each other, e.g., about the ban beginning in 2005. I don't think we can arbitrarily conclude that those websites are Wiki-unreliable; it seems to me that the consensus of data support the 2005 date and provide an indication that Chinese young people may be less placid than we Westerners may believe. In fact -- this is an opinion, not to be included in the article itself! -- my guess is that the Chinese authorities are less worried that 15 year-old Chinese believe that Ryuk is real than they are worried about student disobedience to centralized authority, whether it's disobedience about manga or about civil rights in general. But that's only an opinion.

: BTW, I just checked all the URLs, and they all work as of the present moment.

: So, I'd like to ask for comments before I rework the preceding and boil it down for inclusion in the article.

: [[User:Timothy Perper|Timothy Perper]] ([[User talk:Timothy Perper|talk]]) 18:57, 27 August 2008 (UTC)

::Whilst I understand the problems of the primary sources being in Chinese it sure would be nice to at least know which schools we are talking about here and which official."Some schools" is really wishy washy. [[User:Theresa knott|Theresa Knott]] | [[User talk:Theresa knott|The otter sank]] 19:41, 27 August 2008 (UTC)

:::I know it sounds wishy-washy, but [[WP:AWW|the weasel words guideline]] indicates that there are some points where "weasel words" are appropriate, like when the alternative would be too detailed, placing [[WP:UNDUE|undue weight]] on the phenomenon, and the reader may not benefit from the precise details. This is perhaps one of those cases? -[[User:Malkinann|Malkinann]] ([[User talk:Malkinann|talk]]) 22:15, 27 August 2008 (UTC)

I don't know if this will help, but I wrote author/translator [[Jonathan Clements]] (who is fluent in both Japanese and Mandarin) to ask him about it. His response is chock full of information and sources, so I'll reproduce it here in full:


===Biological characteristics===
{{quotation|As it happens, I have written about the Death Note topic myself in the
The average weight of the living West Indian Ocean coelacanth, ''Latimeria chalumnae'', is 80 [[Kilogram|kg]] (176 lb), and they can reach up to 2 [[Metre|m]] (6.5 ft) in length. Adult females are slightly larger than males. Based on growth rings in their ear bones ([[otoliths]]), scientists infer that individual coelacanths may live as long as 80 to 100 years. Coelacanths live as deep as 700 m (2300 ft) below [[sea level]], but are more usually found at depths of 90 to 200 m. Living examples of ''Latimeria chalumnae'' have a deep blue color which probably camouflages them from prey species; however, the Indonesian species is brown. ''Latimeria chalumnae'' is widely but very sparsely distributed around the rim of the western [[Indian Ocean]], from South Africa northward along the east African coast to Kenya, the Comoro Island and Madagascar, seemingly occurring in small colonies.
past. Here is my column from issue 35 of the British magazine NEO,
Coelacanth eyes are very sensitive, and have a ''[[tapetum lucidum]]''. Coelacanths are almost never caught in the daytime or on nights with full moons, due to the sensitivity of their eyes. Coelacanth eyes also have many [[rod cell|rods]]: receptors in the retina that help animals see in dim light. Together, the rods and [[tapetum lucidum|tapetum]] help the fish see better in dark water.
which was published in summer 2007, and which I must have written a
[[Image:Coelacanth1.JPG|thumb|left|250px|Coelacanth model in the [[Oxford University Museum of Natural History]]]]
couple of months before.<br />


Coelacanths are opportunistic feeders, hunting [[cuttlefish]], [[squid]], [[snipe eel]]s, small [[shark]]s, and other fish found in their deep reef and volcanic slope [[Habitat (ecology)|habitat]]s. Coelacanths are also known to swim head down, backwards or belly up to locate their prey, presumably utilizing their [[Rostral organ|rostral gland]]. Scientists suspect that one reason this fish has been so successful is that specimens are able to slow down their [[metabolism]]s at will, sinking into the less-inhabited depths and minimizing their nutritional requirements in a sort of [[hibernation]] mode.
You should feel free to quote as much of this as you like, as long as
you cite NEO. This article is one of the many which will be reprinted
in the forthcoming Schoolgirl Milky Crisis, by the way.<br /><br /><br />


The coelacanths which live near [[Sodwana Bay]], [[South Africa]], rest in caves at depths of 90 to 150 m during daylight hours, but disperse and swim to depths as shallow as 55 m when hunting at night. The depth is not as important as their need for very dim light and, more importantly, for water which has a temperature of 14 to 22 °C. They will rise or sink to find these conditions. The amount of oxygen that their blood can absorb from the water through the gills is dependent on water temperature. Scientific research suggests that the coelacanth must stay in cold, well-oxygenated water or else their blood cannot absorb enough oxygen. <ref> page 200, Weinberg, Samantha. 2006. A Fish Caught in Time: the Search for the Coelacanth. HarperCollins Publishers, New York, NY.</ref>


In accordance with the [[CITES|Convention on International Trade of Endangered Species]] treaty, the coelacanth was added to Appendix I (threatened with extinction) in 1989. The treaty forbids international trade for commercial purposes and regulates all trade, including sending specimens to museums, through a system of permits. In 1998, the total coelacanth population was estimated to have been 500 or fewer, a number that would threaten the survival of the species.<ref name="washingtonpost1">Jewett, Susan L., [http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/national/horizon/nov98/fishstory.htm "On the Trail of the Coelacanth, a Living Fossil"], ''[[The Washington Post]]'', [[1998-11-11]], Retrieved on [[2007-06-19]].</ref>
35: Bum Notes<br /><br />


===Reproduction===
Jonathan Clements is making a list<br /><br />
Female coelacanths [[ovoviviparity|give birth to live young]], called "pups", in groups of between 5 and 25 [[spawn (biology)#Fry|fry]] at a time; the pups are capable of surviving on their own immediately after birth. Their reproductive behaviors are not well known, but it is believed that they are not [[Sexual maturity|sexually mature]] until after 20 years of age. Gestation time is 13 months.


==Discoveries==
To Beijing, where Tsugumi Oba and Takeshi Obata's Death Note manga has
kicked off a local controversy. The manga, also an anime and
live-action movie, features a magical notebook which will cause the
death of anyone whose name is written in it. Originally a possession
of a spirit of the underworld, it falls into the hands of a Japanese
boy, who uses it for good – sort of Ring meets The Equalizer.<br />
Except now Chinese junior schoolchildren have been found keeping
their own Death Note notebooks, writing down the names of their
classroom enemies, and putting curses on their teachers. This, say the
powers that be, Must Be Stopped.<br />
But there's more at work here. The Chinese press first began
covering Death Note copycats when schools banned the manga in
Shenyang. Shenyang is the capital of Manchuria, which was effectively
part of Japan in the 1930s. This both predisposes the locals to follow
Japanese media, and the powers that be to get huffy about it.<br />
Death Note is also merely one of several horror comics implicated in
the backlash, and many are pirate editions – could this be an
underhand way of cleaning up illegal presses, rather than children's
minds? The Chinese government doesn't believe in "superstition", so
banning Death Note for its occult influence is the thin end of a
controversial wedge that would end in recognising the existence of the
supernatural!<br />
Speaking as someone who was reprimanded at school for employing
sorcery in a hockey game (long story), I can attest that this is just
children being silly. Children aware of their own powerlessness start
looking for it elsewhere – in the occult, in religion, in music, in
sports. Girls go through a teen witch phase, little boys decide
they're Jedi. In Singapore, you can buy Death Note jotters in the
local equivalent of Woolworth's. The Death Note controversy is less to
do with the occult, and more to do with unruly children, an admittedly
macabre fad, and yet another excuse to blame Japan for modern China's
social ills.<br /><br />


{| class="wikitable"
|+ '''Timeline of discoveries'''<ref>Iziko South African Museum, Cape Town</ref><ref name="Nelson">Nelson, Joseph S. (2006). ''Fishes of the World''. [[John Wiley & Sons]], Inc. ISBN 0471250317</ref>
! Date || Description
|-
| '''1938''' || ([[December 23]]) Discovery of the first modern coelacanth 30&nbsp;[[kilometer]]s SW of [[East London, South Africa]].
|-
| '''1952''' || ([[December 21]]) Second specimen identified in the [[Comoros]]. Since then more than 200 have been caught around the islands.
|-
| '''1988''' || First photographs of coelacanths in their natural habitat, by Hans Fricke off [[Grande Comore]].
|-
| '''1991''' || First coelacanth identified near [[Mozambique]], 24&nbsp;kilometers offshore NE of [[Quelimane]].
|-
| '''1995''' || First recorded coelacanth on [[Madagascar]], 30&nbsp;kilometers S of [[Toliara|Tuléar]].
|-
| '''1997''' || ([[September 18]]) New species of coelacanth found in [[Indonesia]].
|-
| '''2000''' || A group found by divers off [[Sodwana Bay]], [[South Africa]].
|-
| '''2001''' || A group found off the coast of [[Kenya]].
|-
| '''2003''' || First coelacanth caught by fisherman in [[Tanzania]]. Within the year, 22 were caught in total.
|-
| '''2004''' || Canadian researcher William Sommers captured the largest recorded specimen of coelacanth off the coast of [[Madagascar]].{{Fact|date=October 2007}}
|-
| '''2007''' || ([[May 19]]) [[Indonesia]]n fisherman Justinus Lahama caught a 1.31&nbsp;[[metre|meter]] (4.30&nbsp;[[foot (unit of length)|ft]]) long, 51&nbsp;[[kilogram]] (112&nbsp;[[pound (mass)|lb]]) coelacanth off [[Sulawesi|Sulawesi Island]], near Bunaken National Marine Park, that survived for 17 hours in a quarantined pool.<ref name="CNN1">[[Reuters]] (2007), [http://today.reuters.co.uk/news/articlenews.aspx?type=oddlyEnoughNews&storyid=2007-05-21T055304Z_01_JAK147591_RTRIDST_0_OUKOE-UK-INDONESIA-FISH.XML "Indonesian fisherman nets ancient fish"], ''Reuters UK'', [[2007-05-21]], Retrieved on [[2007-07-16]].</ref>
|-
| '''2007''' || ([[July 15]]) Two fishermen from [[Zanzibar]] caught a coelacanth measuring 1.34&nbsp;meters (4.40&nbsp;ft), and weighing 27&nbsp;kilograms (60&nbsp;lb). The fish was caught off the north tip of the island, off the coast of Tanzania.<ref>Reuters (2007), [http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20070715/sc_nm/zanzibar_fish_dc "Zanzibar fishermen land ancient fish"],''[[yahoo.com]]'', [[2007-07-15]], Retrieved on [[2007-07-16]].</ref>
|-
|}
===First find in South Africa===
[[Image:Coelacanth and Courtenay-Latimer.jpg|left|thumb|250px|[[Marjorie Courtenay-Latimer]] with the first discovered Coelacanth.]]


On [[December 23]], [[1938]], Hendrik Goosen, the captain of the [[Commercial trawler|trawler]] ''Nerine'', returned to the harbour at [[East London, South Africa]], after a trawl around the mouth of the [[Chalumna River]]. As he frequently did, he telephoned his friend, [[Marjorie Courtenay-Latimer]], curator at East London's small museum, to see if she wanted to look over the contents of the catch for anything interesting. At the harbour, Latimer noticed a blue fin and took a closer look. There she found what she later described as "the most beautiful fish I had ever seen, five feet long, and a pale [[mauve]] blue with [[iridescent]] silver markings."
----
<br />


Failing to find a description of the creature in any of her books, she attempted to contact her friend, Professor [[James Leonard Brierley Smith]], but he was away for Christmas. Unable to preserve the fish, she reluctantly sent it to a [[taxidermy|taxidermist]]. When Smith returned, he immediately recognized it as a coelacanth, known only from fossils. Smith named the fish ''Latimeria chalumnae'' in honor of Marjorie Courtenay-Latimer and the waters in which it was found. The two discoverers received immediate recognition, and the fish became known as a "[[living fossil]]." The 1938 coelacanth is still on display in the [[East London, South Africa]], museum.
I went and checked Chinese Wikipedia. The Death Note page is very
detailed, and has a section on the controversies. It cites three
references, one of which is the Anglophone Reuters piece that you and
your wiki-associates have already read. The earliest, however, is this
one:<br /><br />


However, as the specimen had been stuffed, the [[gill]]s and [[skeleton]] were not available for examination, and some doubt therefore remained as to whether it was truly the same species. Smith began a hunt for a second specimen that would take more than a decade.
http://news.xinhuanet.com/school/2005-01/11/content_2446984.htm


===Comoros===
The page is still up, and refers directly to the Shenyang incident I
[[Image:Latimeria Chalumnae - Coelacanth - NHMW.jpg|right|thumb|300px|Preserved specimen of ''Latimeria chalumnae'' in the [[Naturhistorisches Museum|Natural History Museum]], Vienna, Austria (length: 170 cm - weight: 60 kg). This specimen was caught on 18 October 1974, next to Salimani/Selimani (Grande Comore, Comoros Islands) {{coord|11|48|40.7|S|43|16|3.3|E}}.]]
cited in my article. So I would say that the comments on the US Wiki
page are pretty fair. I'd never heard of the Lanzhou incident before,
but Lanzhou is a town I know relatively well, and it's precisely the
sort of place where the news is likely to carry tales of unwelcome
Japanese sorcery in the midst of Silly Season.<br /><br />


A worldwide search was launched for more coelacanths, with a reward of 100 [[Pound sterling|British pounds]], a very substantial sum to the average South African fisherman of the time. Fourteen years later, one specimen was found in the [[Comoros]], but the fish was no stranger to the locals — in the port of Mutsamudu on the Comorian island of [[Anjouan]], the Comorians were puzzled to be so rewarded for a "gombessa" or "mame", their names for the nearly inedible fish that their fishermen occasionally caught by mistake.
Incidentally, there appear to be two legal Chinese translations of
Death Note, one published in Taiwan, and the other in Hong Kong.
Neither is directly accessible to young Mainland Chinese readers,
however, as the Taiwanese translation would be in long-form kanji, and
the Hong Kong one is presumably in Cantonese.<br /><br />


The second specimen, found in 1952 by Comorian fisherman Ahamadi Abdallah, was described as a different species, first as 'Malania hunti' and later as ''Malania anjounae'', after [[Daniel François Malan]], the [[South African Prime Minister]] who had dispatched an [[SAAF]] [[C-47 Skytrain|Dakota]] at the behest of Professor Smith to fetch the specimen. It was later discovered that the lack of a first [[dorsal fin]], at first thought to be significant, was caused by an injury early in the specimen's life. Ironically, Malan was a staunch [[creationism|creationist]]; when he was first shown the primitive creature, he exclaimed, with a twinkle, "My, it is ugly. Do you mean to say we once looked like that?"<ref> page 73, Weinberg, Samantha. 2006. A Fish Caught in Time: the Search for the Coelacanth. HarperCollins Publishers, New York, NY.</ref> The specimen retrieved by Smith is on display at the [[SAIAB]] in [[Grahamstown]], [[South Africa]] where he worked.
Feel free to quote this email as well, if it helps.}}


The Comorians are now aware of the significance of the [[endangered species]], and have established a program to return accidentally-caught coelacanth to deep water.
I hope this provides some hard data to shore up this section. [[User:Matt Thorn|Matt Thorn]] ([[User talk:Matt Thorn|talk]]) 06:01, 28 August 2008 (UTC)


As for Smith, who died in 1968, his account of the coelacanth story appeared in the book ''Old Fourlegs'', first published in 1956. His book ''Sea Fishes of the Indian Ocean'', illustrated and co-authored by his wife Margaret, remains the standard [[Ichthyology|ichthyological]] reference for the region.
:: Now '''that''' is useful stuff. The xinhuanet site is in Chinese. Anyway, I'll try to put together a new section this weekend or so, using Clements' article from NEO, which I'll go look for next as well as the other sources. [[User:Timothy Perper|Timothy Perper]] ([[User talk:Timothy Perper|talk]]) 12:02, 28 August 2008 (UTC)


In 1988, [[National Geographic]] photographer [[Hans Fricke]] was the first to photograph the species in its natural habitat, {{convert|180|m|ft|-1}} off [[Grande Comore]]'s west coast.<ref name="NatlGeo">{{cite journal|last=Fricke|first=Hans|title=Coelacanths:The fish that time forgot|journal=[[National Geographic]]|pages=824–828|volume=173|issue=6|date=June, 1988|doi=10.1023/A:1007584227315}}</ref>
::: I couldn't find Issue 35 of Neo on the web; does anyone have a website for it? If not, does anyone have issue 35? If they do, can you post the exact reference to what Clements wrote above and mentioned as being in issue 35? [[User:Timothy Perper|Timothy Perper]] ([[User talk:Timothy Perper|talk]]) 12:33, 28 August 2008 (UTC)


===Second species in Indonesia===
:::: I just emailed Neo magazine in the UK asking them. In the meantime, we'll wait. I don't want to impose again on Matt Thorn to ask him to contact Clements, but if Neo doesn't answer me, I'll ask Matt. We ''will'' track down this reference. [[User:Timothy Perper|Timothy Perper]] ([[User talk:Timothy Perper|talk]]) 06:59, 1 September 2008 (UTC)
On [[September 18]], [[1997]], Arnaz and Mark Erdmann, traveling in [[Indonesia]] on their [[honeymoon]], saw a strange fish enter the market at [[Manado Tua]], on the island of [[Sulawesi]].<ref name="washingtonpost1"/> Mark thought it was a ''gombessa'' (Comoros coelacanth), although it was brown, not blue. An expert noticed their pictures on the [[Internet]] and realized its significance. Subsequently, the Erdmanns contacted local fishermen and asked for any future catches of the fish to be brought to them. A second Indonesian specimen, 1.2 m in length and weighing 29 kg., was captured alive on [[July 30]], [[1998]].<ref name="Nelson"/> It lived for six hours, allowing scientists to photographically document its coloration, fin movements and general behavior. The specimen was preserved and donated to the ''Museum Zoologicum [[Bogor]]iense (MZB)'', part of the ''[[Indonesian Institute of Sciences]] (LIPI)''.<ref name="washingtonpost1"/>


[[DNA]] testing revealed that this specimen differed genetically from the Comorian population. Superficially, the Indonesian coelacanth, locally called ''raja laut'' ("King of the Sea"), appears to be the same as those found in the Comoros except that the background coloration of the skin is brownish-gray rather than bluish. This fish was described in a 1999 issue of ''Environmental Biology of Fishes'' by Pouyaud et al. It was given the [[Binomial nomenclature|scientific name]] ''Latimeria menadoensis''. A molecular study estimated the divergence time between the two coelacanth species to be 40–30 [[mya (unit)|mya]].<ref>Inoue J.G., Miya M., Venkatesh B., Nishida M. 2005. The mitochondrial genome of Indonesian coelacanth Latimeria menadoensis (Sarcopterygii: Coelacanthiformes) and divergence time estimation between the two coelacanths. Gene 349: 227-235</ref>
:'''Got it!''' Gemma Cox, the editor of Neo Magazine, just sent me the reference information. It's


On May 19, 2007, Justinus Lahama, an Indonesian fisherman, caught a 1.3-metre-long, 50kg/110 pound coelacanth off the coast near Manado, on northern Sulawesi Island near Bunaken National Marine Park. After spending 30 minutes out of water, the fish, still alive, was placed in a netted pool in front of a restaurant at the edge of the sea. It survived for 17 hours. Coelacanths, closely related to lungfish, usually live at depths of 200-1,000 metres. The fish was filmed by local authorities swimming in the metre-deep pool, then frozen after it died. AFP claim French, Japanese and Indonesian scientists working with the French Institute for Development and Research carried out a [[necropsy]] on the coelacanth with genetic analysis to follow.
:Clements, Jonathan (2007, August) "Manga Pulse." ''NEO Magazine'', Issue #35, p. 19.
The local university is now studying the carcass.<ref> [http://www.cosmosmagazine.com/node/1504 "Ancient Indonesian fish is 'living fossil'"], ''Cosmos Online'', [[2007-07-29]].</ref><ref name="CNN1"/>


===St. Lucia Marine Protected Area in South Africa===
:OK, we can start to move on this again.
In [[South Africa]], the search continued on and off over the years. 46-year-old diver Riaan Bouwer lost his life searching for coelacanths in June 1998.


On the 28th of October 2000, just south of the [[Mozambique]] border in [[Sodwana Bay]] in the [[Greater St. Lucia Wetland Park|St. Lucia Marine Protected Area]], three deep-water divers, Pieter Venter, Peter Timm, and Etienne le Roux, made a dive to 104 metres and unexpectedly spotted a coelacanth.
:[[User:Timothy Perper|Timothy Perper]] ([[User talk:Timothy Perper|talk]]) 15:21, 3 September 2008 (UTC)


Calling themselves "SA Coelacanth Expedition 2000", the group returned with photographic equipment and several additional members. On the 27th of November, after an unsuccessful initial dive the previous day, four members of the group, Pieter Venter, Gilbert Gunn, Christo Serfontein, and Dennis Harding, found three coelacanths. The largest was between 1.5 and 1.8 metres in length; the other two were from 1 to 1.2 metres. The fish swam head-down and appeared to be feeding from the cavern ledges. The group returned with video footage and photographs of the coelacanths.
:: I just replaced the old section with new, rewritten and better referenced material, including the Clements reference immediately above. [[User:Timothy Perper|Timothy Perper]] ([[User talk:Timothy Perper|talk]]) 16:52, 4 September 2008 (UTC)


During the dive, however, Serfontein lost consciousness, and 34-year-old Dennis Harding rose to the surface with him in an uncontrolled ascent. Harding complained of neck pains and died from a [[cerebral embolism]] while on the boat. Serfontein recovered after being taken underwater for [[decompression sickness]] treatment.
== Added Reference to Review in ''[[Protoculture Addicts]]'' ==


In March–April of 2002, the Jago Submersible and Fricke Dive Team descended into the depths off Sodwana and observed fifteen coelacanths. A [[dart probe]] was used to collect tissue samples.
I added a reference to Carl Kimlinger's strikingly negative review of ''Death Note'' that just appeared in the current issue of ''[[Protoculture Addicts]]''. Not all reviews of ''Death Note'' are positive, and such reviews need to be cited to maintain a balance among reviewers. I assume that no one is going to argue that ''PA'' is anything except a major publication covering manga and anime. [[User:Timothy Perper|Timothy Perper]] ([[User talk:Timothy Perper|talk]]) 13:14, 27 August 2008 (UTC)


The shallowest recorded sighting of a coelacanth is at a depth of 58 m off the coast of Sodwana Bay by Christo Vanjaarsveld.
:Of course not, considering that it's published by [[Protoculture Inc.]], the parent company of [[Anime News Network]], which is more-or-less ''the'' de facto [[WP:RS]] for the [[WP:ANIME|animanga project]]. —[[User:Dinoguy1000|<span style="color: blue;">Dino</span>]][[User talk:Dinoguy1000|<span style="color: green; font-weight: normal;">guy</span>]][[Special:Contributions/Dinoguy1000|<span style="color: orange;">1000</span>]] 17:43, 27 August 2008 (UTC)


===Tanzania===
:: I agree with you on both counts -- PA is an excellent source and so is ANN. [[User:Timothy Perper|Timothy Perper]] ([[User talk:Timothy Perper|talk]]) 18:09, 27 August 2008 (UTC)
Coelacanths have been caught off the coast of [[Tanzania]] since 2004. Two coelacanths were initially reported captured in Kigombe, a small village off the edge of the [[Indian Ocean]] in August 2004. A spate of 19 more specimens of these extremely rare fishes weighing between 25 kg. to 80 kg. were reported netted in the space of the next 5 months, with another specimen captured in January 2005. A coelacanth weighing as much as 110 kg. was reported by [[the Observer]] newspaper in 2006. Officials of the ''Tanga Coastal Zone Conservation and Development Programme'', which has a long-term strategy for protecting the species, see a connection with the timing of the captures with [[trawling]] - especially by [[Japan]]ese vessels - near the coelacanth's habitat, as within a couple of days of [[Commercial trawler|trawlers]] casting their nets coelacanths have turned up in shallow-water [[fishing net]]s intended for [[shark]]s. The sudden appearance of the coelacanth off Tanzania that has raised real worries about its future due to damage done to the coelacanth population by the effects of indiscriminate trawling methods and habitat damage.<ref name="tanzania1">[http://observer.guardian.co.uk/world/story/0,16937,1681745,00.html "Dinosaur fish pushed to the brink by deep-sea trawlers"], ''[[The Observer]]'', [[2006-01-08]], Retrieved on [[2007-06-18]].</ref>


Hassan Kolombo, a programme co-ordinator, said. "Once we do not have trawlers, we don't get the coelacanths, it's as simple as that." His colleague, Solomon Makoloweka, said they had been pressuring the Tanzanian government to limit trawlers' activities. He said: "I suppose we should be grateful to these trawlers, because they have revealed this amazing and unique fish population. But we are concerned they could destroy these precious things. We want the government to limit their activity and to help fund a proper research program so that we can learn more about the coelacanths and protect them."<ref name="tanzania1"/>
== Added Original Research Tag ==


==Taxonomy==
Enthusiastic fans have been adding (for some time, I'm sure) a variety of "it means" and "Ohba said" style comments. All are interesting and most are unreferenced and unsourced. So they're original research. Along with a general clean-up and rewrite, this article needs sources, not more enthusiastic, interesting but undocumented fan gossip. Sorry, folks, that's how Wikipedia is -- no original research [[User:Timothy Perper|Timothy Perper]] ([[User talk:Timothy Perper|talk]]) 20:48, 30 August 2008 (UTC)
[[Image:Coelacanth specimen NHM.jpg|thumb|right|250px|A preserved Coelacanth specimen in the [[Natural History Museum]], London]]
*Well the "Ohba said" statements at least assert that at one point in time Ohba stated something, so those sentences require sources. [[User:JuJube|JuJube]] ([[User talk:JuJube|talk]]) 20:52, 30 August 2008 (UTC)
[[Image:Fishapods.jpg|thumb|right|350px|In [[Devonian|Late Devonian]] [[vertebrate]] speciation, descendants of [[Pelagic zone|pelagic]] [[Sarcopterygii|lobe-finned fish]] – like ''[[Eusthenopteron]]'' – exhibited a sequence of adaptations:<ul>
<li>''[[Panderichthys]]'', suited to muddy shallows;
<li>''[[Tiktaalik]]'' with limb-like fins that could take it up onto land;
<li>[[Tetrapod|Early tetrapods]] in weed-filled swamps, such as:<ul>
<li>''[[Acanthostega]]'' which had feet with eight digits,
<li>''[[Ichthyostega]]'' with limbs.</ul></ul>
Descendants also included pelagic lobe-finned fish such as coelacanth species.]]


Subclass Coelacanthimorpha (Actinistia) are sometimes used to designate the group of [[Sarcopterygii|Sarcopterygian]] fish that contains the Coelacanthiformes. The following is a classification of known coelacanth genera and families:<ref name="Nelson"/>
: Yep, they sure do. [[User:Timothy Perper|Timothy Perper]] ([[User talk:Timothy Perper|talk]]) 22:57, 30 August 2008 (UTC)


'''Class [[Sarcopterygii]]'''<br/>
== Adding new referenced introduction ==
'''Subclass [[Coelacanthimorpha]]'''<br/>
* '''Order COELACANTHIFORMES'''
** '''Family Coelacanthidae''' (extinct)
*** ''[[Axelia]]'' (extinct)
*** ''[[Coelacanthus]]'' (extinct)
*** ''[[Ticinepomis]]'' (extinct)
*** ''[[Wimania]]'' (extinct)
** '''Family Diplocercidae''' (extinct)
*** ''[[Diplocercides]]'' (extinct)
** '''Family Hadronectoridae''' (extinct)
*** ''[[Allenypterus]]'' (extinct)
*** ''[[Hadronector]]'' (extinct)
*** ''[[Polyosteorhynchus]]'' (extinct)
** '''Family Mawsoniidae''' (extinct)
*** ''[[Alcoveria]]'' (extinct)
*** ''[[Axelrodichthys]]'' (extinct)
*** ''[[Chinlea]]'' (extinct)
*** ''[[Diplurus]]'' (extinct)
*** ''[[Holophagus]]'' (extinct)
*** ''[[Mawsonia]]'' (extinct)
** '''Family Miguashaiidae''' (extinct)
*** ''[[Miguashaia]]'' (extinct)
** '''Family Latimeriidae'''
*** ''[[Holophagus]]'' (extinct)
*** ''[[Libys]]'' (extinct)
*** ''[[Macropoma]]'' (extinct)
*** ''[[Macropomoides]]'' (extinct)
*** ''[[Megacoelacanthus]]'' (extinct)
*** ''Latimeria'' (James Leonard Brierley Smith, 1939)
**** ''L. chalumnae'' (Comorese coelacanth) (James Leonard Brierley Smith, 1939)
**** ''L. menadoensis'' (Indonesian coelacanth) (Pouyaud, Wirjoatmodjo, Rachmatika, Tjakrawidjaja, et al., 1999)
*** ''[[Undina (fish)|Undina]]'' (extinct)
** '''Family Laugiidae''' (extinct)
*** ''[[Coccoderma]]'' (extinct)
*** ''[[Laugia]]'' (extinct)
** '''Family Rhabdodermatidae''' (extinct)
*** ''[[Caridosuctor]]'' (extinct)
*** ''[[Rhabdoderma]]'' (extinct)
** '''Family Whiteiidae''' (extinct)
*** ''[[Whiteia]]'' (extinct)


==The coelacanth in popular culture==
I'm going to add a new introduction with lots of references and a few "citation needed" tags. It's a lot better than before. I don't really like the way all the dates clutter up the text, so I may put the dates into the footnotes, but other people should add references if they have them. [[User:Timothy Perper|Timothy Perper]] ([[User talk:Timothy Perper|talk]]) 22:57, 30 August 2008 (UTC)
{{trivia|date=July 2008}}


: There are other problems with this article, including the in-universe descriptions of activities and motivations for Light, L, and (above all) Misa. I'm going to start working my way through the article, changing stuff and adding references. [[User:Timothy Perper|Timothy Perper]] ([[User talk:Timothy Perper|talk]]) 23:31, 30 August 2008 (UTC)


The coelacanths' widely-published status as a "[[living fossil]]" earned it a place in music, video games, literature, and television. "Coelacanth" is the title of songs and albums by bands including [[John Fahey (musician)|John Fahey]], [[Shriekback]], [[Mr. Children]] and [[Polysics]]. Coelacanths are also heavily featured in video games. The coelacanth appears in games such as ''[[Animal Crossing]]'',<ref>[http://www.dinofish.com/image28.html "Nintendocanth"]</ref>, [[Megaman X2]], ''[[SEGA Marine Fishing]]'', ''[[E.V.O.: Search for Eden]]'' (dubbed "Coelafish"), ''[[We Love Katamari]]'', ''[[Me and My Katamari]]'', and ''[[Endless Ocean]]''. The Coelacanth was also the inspiration for the Pokémon [[Relicanth]],<ref>[http://www.dinofish.com/replicanth.html "Relicanth"]. Retrieved on 2007-[[January 13|1-13]].</ref> the [[Digimon]] [[Coelamon]], (a flying Coelacanth), and [[Boss (video games)|bosses]] in the [[Darius series]].<ref>[http://www.dinofish.com/image22.html Cyber Coelacanth]. Retrieved on 2007-[[January 13|1-13]]].</ref>
::I added citations for the manga serialization and the novel by Nisio. Hope this is what you were looking for, Tim. [[User:Matt Thorn|Matt Thorn]] ([[User talk:Matt Thorn|talk]]) 06:20, 1 September 2008 (UTC)


In [[Margaret Atwood]]'s novel ''Oryx and Crake'', the coelacanth is used as a symbol for the underground scientific association Extinctathon. In ''[[Dirk Gently's Holistic Detective Agency]]'', [[Professor Chronotis]] admits to causing the extinction of the [[dodo]]s by trying to save the Coelacanth. In [[Lee Battersby]]'s ''Father Muerte and the Rain'', coelacanths rain from the sky when an ancient butterfly is stolen from its home time. The reference to the Latimeria Chalumnae is also a recurring one in Anne Landsman's novel, ''The Rowing Lesson'', which is set, in part, in pre-World War II South Africa. Specific reference is made to the coelacanth's discovery as part of the narrative and as an allegorical reference to one's connection with the past.
::: It sure was. Many many thanks. <s>While we're at it, Matt, can I ask you if you can find some Japanese references to the three [[Death Note]] films?</s> I added references in English, from ANN, which ought to do it. The sentence is in the middle of the introduction somewhere -- it's easy to find. [[User:Timothy Perper|Timothy Perper]] ([[User talk:Timothy Perper|talk]]) 06:34, 1 September 2008 (UTC)


[[Interrobang Cartel|Interröbang Cartel's]] works include the album (in progess) ''Bad Coelacanth'' and the song ''Prelude to the Afternoon of a Coelacanth''.<ref>{{Citation | last = Haller | first = Jacob
:::: I just removed the "rewrite introduction" tag because the intro is OK now. [[User:Timothy Perper|Timothy Perper]] ([[User talk:Timothy Perper|talk]]) 07:41, 1 September 2008 (UTC)
| title = Interröbang Cartel MP3s | url = http://interrobang.jwgh.org/mp3.cgi
| accessdate = 2008-09-10 }}</ref>


The Transformers character Skalor, one of the [[Seacons]], has an alternate mode based on the coelacanth.
== Section on Function of the Death Notes ==


Coelocanths have featured in film and TV series such as ''[[Atlantis: The Lost Empire]]'', ''[[Monster on the Campus]]'' and ''[[Futurama]]''.
This section follows directly after the Introduction, suggesting that the person who put it in thinks that the five rules governing the action of the Death Notes are '''more important''' than the characters in the story. I'm not sure of that at all, and recommend shifting this section to later in the article and shortening it. I don't see any real significance to listing the rules without explaining how they are used in the narrative. In other words, this section has an in-universe quality without ever situating the rules in the narrative or its outcomes. Moreover, Light adds some fake rules to throw off pursuers, and if we're not careful, we'll get an endless spiral of more and more details that fascinate fans and otaku but aren't encyclopedic.


The sculptress [[Jeanne Grut]] produced two [[faience]] figures of coelacanths for the [[Royal Copenhagen]] porcelain manufactory in a series known as 'Blue Fish'. Originally made in 1963, these are still produced today.<ref>[http://www.royalcopenhagen.com/Figurines/Blue-Fish.aspx 'Blue Fish' series, Royal Copenhagen website]. Retrieved: June 13, 2008.</ref>
A better opening might be something like "The Death Note notebooks operate under a complex set of supernatural rules, not by the whim or will of the human being who uses them" and we take it from there. Otherwise, it reads like an instruction manual for a video game.


Finally, coelacanths have been used as symbols in objects and as nicknames. "Les Coelecantes" (meaning "the Coelacanths") is a nickname for the [[Comoros national football team]]. Coelacanths have been shown on coins,<ref>[http://www.dinofish.com/image26.html "Coincanth"]. Retrieved on 2007-[[January 13|1-13]].</ref> phone cards,<ref>[http://www.dinofish.com/image19.html "Phonecanth"]. 2007-[[January 1|1-13]].</ref> and beer bottles.<ref>[http://www.dinofish.com/image18.html "Beercanth"]. Retrieved on 2007-[[January 13|1-13]].</ref>
Comments?


==References==
[[User:Timothy Perper|Timothy Perper]] ([[User talk:Timothy Perper|talk]]) 07:58, 1 September 2008 (UTC)
{{reflist|2}}


==See also==
: If no one objects, I'm going to move the "Function" section to immediately after the "Characters" section. I'll wait a few days for comments, and then make the move. [[User:Timothy Perper|Timothy Perper]] ([[User talk:Timothy Perper|talk]]) 08:56, 2 September 2008 (UTC)
* [[Lazarus taxon]]
* [[Megamouth Shark]]


==External links==
:: Since no one objected, I moved the section. [[User:Timothy Perper|Timothy Perper]] ([[User talk:Timothy Perper|talk]]) 15:29, 4 September 2008 (UTC)
{{portal|Fish}}
{{portal|Paleontology}}
{{commons|Latimeria chalumnae}}
{{wikispecies|Latimeria}}
* [http://www.acep.co.za/ African Coelacanth Ecosystem Programme] ([[ACEP]]), as the South African Coelacanth Conservation and Genome Resource Programme
* [http://www.dinofish.com/ DINOFISH .com] Coelacanth: the fish out of time
* [http://marinebio.org/species.asp?id=54 Coelacanth] at MarineBio.org
* [http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/fish/anatomy.html PBS: NOVA - Anatomy of the Coelacanth]
* [http://www.coelacanth-diver.co.za/ Diving for Coelacanths]
* [http://www.geocities.jp/ancientfishtree/Coelacanth.html Divergence time estimation] of the two coelacanths species based on the whole [[mitochondrial genome]] sequences.
* [http://www.seasky.org/monsters/sea7a1b.html Coelacanth Information]
<!---


Before adding new links here, please make sure the article need the link.
== Changed Header to "Copy Cat Crimes and Imitations" ==
For Wikipedia guidelines see [[Wikipedia:External links]]. Thanks.


---->
Before, it said only "Imitations," which could mean other manga that have ''imitated'' the plot, characters, and so on of ''Death Note.'' That's not what the section is about, so I changed it to reflect the real content more accurately. [[User:Timothy Perper|Timothy Perper]] ([[User talk:Timothy Perper|talk]]) 19:36, 4 September 2008 (UTC)


{{Sarcopterygii}}
== New section "Parodies" added by someone ==


[[Category:Lobe-finned fish]]
Which is fine, but the single sentence added needs a citation to convince readers that (a) it ''is'' Light Yagami, especially if he can't be seen fully and (b) that the show he maybe appears in is a parody of "Death Note." The Wikilink doesn't mention DN at all, nor mention Light Yagami, so more is needed. [[User:Timothy Perper|Timothy Perper]] ([[User talk:Timothy Perper|talk]]) 12:00, 23 September 2008 (UTC)
[[Category:Living fossils]]
[[Category:Live-bearing fish]]
[[Category:Ovoviviparous fish]]
[[Category:Fauna of Comoros]]
[[Category:Fish of Indonesia]]
[[Category:Fauna of Kenya]]
[[Category:Fauna of Mozambique]]
[[Category:Fauna of South Africa]]
[[Category:Fauna of Tanzania]]


{{Link FA|uk}}
: Well, someone removed it, so I guess the question is moot. [[User:Timothy Perper|Timothy Perper]] ([[User talk:Timothy Perper|talk]]) 13:07, 23 September 2008 (UTC)
[[bg:Латимерия]]
[[ca:Celacant]]
[[cs:Latimérie podivná]]
[[da:Coelacanth]]
[[de:Quastenflosser]]
[[es:Coelacanthimorpha]]
[[eo:Celakantoformaj]]
[[fr:Cœlacanthe]]
[[ko:실러캔스]]
[[id:Coelacanth]]
[[it:Latimeria]]
[[jbo:gombesa]]
[[ml:സീലാകാന്ത്]]
[[nl:Coelacanten]]
[[ja:シーラカンス]]
[[no:Kvastfinnefisker]]
[[pl:Latimeria]]
[[pt:Celacanto]]
[[ru:Целакант]]
[[simple:Coelacanth]]
[[sk:Latiméria divná]]
[[fi:Latimeria]]
[[sv:Tofsstjärtfiskar]]
[[th:ปลาซีลาแคนท์]]
[[vi:Bộ Cá vây tay]]
[[uk:Целакант]]
[[zh:腔棘魚]]

Revision as of 15:59, 13 October 2008

Coelacanth
Temporal range: Devonian–Cretaceous  (but extant)
Latimeria chalumnae
Scientific classification
Kingdom:
Phylum:
Class:
Subclass:
Actinistia
Infraclass:
Coelacanthimorpha
Order:
Coelacanthiformes

Berg, 1937
Families

See text.

Coelacanth (Template:PronEng, adaptation of Modern Latin Cœlacanthus > cœl-us + acanth-us from Greek κοῖλ-ος [hollow] + ἄκανθ-α [spine]) is the common name for an order of fish that includes the oldest living lineage of gnathostomata known to date. The coelacanths, which are related to lungfishes and tetrapods, were believed to have been extinct since the end of the Cretaceous period, until the first Latimeria specimen was found off the east coast of South Africa, off the Chalumna River in 1938. (They are, therefore, a Lazarus taxon.) Since 1938, Latimeria chalumnae have been found in the Comoros, Kenya, Tanzania, Mozambique, Madagascar, and in iSimangaliso Wetland Park, East London in South Africa. The second species, L. menadoensis, was described from Sulawesi, Indonesia in 1999.[1][2]

Natural history

They first appeared in the fossil record in the Middle Devonian, about 410 million years ago.[3] Prehistoric species of coelacanth lived in many bodies of water in Late Paleozoic and Mesozoic times.

Coelacanths are lobe-finned fish with the pectoral and anal fins on fleshy stalks supported by bones, and the tail or caudal fin diphycercal (divided into three lobes), the middle one of which also includes a continuation of the notochord. Coelacanths have modified cosmoid scales, which are thinner than true cosmoid scales, which can only be found on extinct fish. Coelacanths also have a special electroreceptive device called a rostral organ in the front of the skull, which probably helps in prey detection. The small device also could help the balance of the fish, as echolocation could be a factor in the way this fish moves.

Fossil record

Although now represented by only two known living species, as a group the coelacanths were once very successful with many genera and species that left an abundant fossil record from the Devonian to the end of the Cretaceous period, at which point they apparently suffered a nearly complete extinction. It is often claimed that the coelacanth has remained unchanged for millions of years, but, in fact, the living species and even genus are unknown from the fossil record. However, some of the extinct species, particularly those of the last known fossil coelacanth, the Cretaceous genus Macropoma, closely resemble the living species.[citation needed] The most likely reason for the gap is the taxon having become extinct in shallow waters. Deep-water fossils are only rarely lifted to levels where paleontologists can recover them, making most deep-water taxa disappear from the fossil record. This situation is still under investigation by scientists.

Latimeria - the modern Coelacanth

Modern Coelacanths
Temporal range: Recent
Latimeria chalumnae
Scientific classification
Kingdom:
Phylum:
Class:
Subclass:
Order:
Family:
Genus:
Latimeria

Smith, 1939
Species
  • L. chalumnae (type)
  • L. menadoensis Pouyaud et al., 1999

Biological characteristics

The average weight of the living West Indian Ocean coelacanth, Latimeria chalumnae, is 80 kg (176 lb), and they can reach up to 2 m (6.5 ft) in length. Adult females are slightly larger than males. Based on growth rings in their ear bones (otoliths), scientists infer that individual coelacanths may live as long as 80 to 100 years. Coelacanths live as deep as 700 m (2300 ft) below sea level, but are more usually found at depths of 90 to 200 m. Living examples of Latimeria chalumnae have a deep blue color which probably camouflages them from prey species; however, the Indonesian species is brown. Latimeria chalumnae is widely but very sparsely distributed around the rim of the western Indian Ocean, from South Africa northward along the east African coast to Kenya, the Comoro Island and Madagascar, seemingly occurring in small colonies. Coelacanth eyes are very sensitive, and have a tapetum lucidum. Coelacanths are almost never caught in the daytime or on nights with full moons, due to the sensitivity of their eyes. Coelacanth eyes also have many rods: receptors in the retina that help animals see in dim light. Together, the rods and tapetum help the fish see better in dark water.

Coelacanth model in the Oxford University Museum of Natural History

Coelacanths are opportunistic feeders, hunting cuttlefish, squid, snipe eels, small sharks, and other fish found in their deep reef and volcanic slope habitats. Coelacanths are also known to swim head down, backwards or belly up to locate their prey, presumably utilizing their rostral gland. Scientists suspect that one reason this fish has been so successful is that specimens are able to slow down their metabolisms at will, sinking into the less-inhabited depths and minimizing their nutritional requirements in a sort of hibernation mode.

The coelacanths which live near Sodwana Bay, South Africa, rest in caves at depths of 90 to 150 m during daylight hours, but disperse and swim to depths as shallow as 55 m when hunting at night. The depth is not as important as their need for very dim light and, more importantly, for water which has a temperature of 14 to 22 °C. They will rise or sink to find these conditions. The amount of oxygen that their blood can absorb from the water through the gills is dependent on water temperature. Scientific research suggests that the coelacanth must stay in cold, well-oxygenated water or else their blood cannot absorb enough oxygen. [4]

In accordance with the Convention on International Trade of Endangered Species treaty, the coelacanth was added to Appendix I (threatened with extinction) in 1989. The treaty forbids international trade for commercial purposes and regulates all trade, including sending specimens to museums, through a system of permits. In 1998, the total coelacanth population was estimated to have been 500 or fewer, a number that would threaten the survival of the species.[5]

Reproduction

Female coelacanths give birth to live young, called "pups", in groups of between 5 and 25 fry at a time; the pups are capable of surviving on their own immediately after birth. Their reproductive behaviors are not well known, but it is believed that they are not sexually mature until after 20 years of age. Gestation time is 13 months.

Discoveries

Timeline of discoveries[6][7]
Date Description
1938 (December 23) Discovery of the first modern coelacanth 30 kilometers SW of East London, South Africa.
1952 (December 21) Second specimen identified in the Comoros. Since then more than 200 have been caught around the islands.
1988 First photographs of coelacanths in their natural habitat, by Hans Fricke off Grande Comore.
1991 First coelacanth identified near Mozambique, 24 kilometers offshore NE of Quelimane.
1995 First recorded coelacanth on Madagascar, 30 kilometers S of Tuléar.
1997 (September 18) New species of coelacanth found in Indonesia.
2000 A group found by divers off Sodwana Bay, South Africa.
2001 A group found off the coast of Kenya.
2003 First coelacanth caught by fisherman in Tanzania. Within the year, 22 were caught in total.
2004 Canadian researcher William Sommers captured the largest recorded specimen of coelacanth off the coast of Madagascar.[citation needed]
2007 (May 19) Indonesian fisherman Justinus Lahama caught a 1.31 meter (4.30 ft) long, 51 kilogram (112 lb) coelacanth off Sulawesi Island, near Bunaken National Marine Park, that survived for 17 hours in a quarantined pool.[8]
2007 (July 15) Two fishermen from Zanzibar caught a coelacanth measuring 1.34 meters (4.40 ft), and weighing 27 kilograms (60 lb). The fish was caught off the north tip of the island, off the coast of Tanzania.[9]

First find in South Africa

File:Coelacanth and Courtenay-Latimer.jpg
Marjorie Courtenay-Latimer with the first discovered Coelacanth.

On December 23, 1938, Hendrik Goosen, the captain of the trawler Nerine, returned to the harbour at East London, South Africa, after a trawl around the mouth of the Chalumna River. As he frequently did, he telephoned his friend, Marjorie Courtenay-Latimer, curator at East London's small museum, to see if she wanted to look over the contents of the catch for anything interesting. At the harbour, Latimer noticed a blue fin and took a closer look. There she found what she later described as "the most beautiful fish I had ever seen, five feet long, and a pale mauve blue with iridescent silver markings."

Failing to find a description of the creature in any of her books, she attempted to contact her friend, Professor James Leonard Brierley Smith, but he was away for Christmas. Unable to preserve the fish, she reluctantly sent it to a taxidermist. When Smith returned, he immediately recognized it as a coelacanth, known only from fossils. Smith named the fish Latimeria chalumnae in honor of Marjorie Courtenay-Latimer and the waters in which it was found. The two discoverers received immediate recognition, and the fish became known as a "living fossil." The 1938 coelacanth is still on display in the East London, South Africa, museum.

However, as the specimen had been stuffed, the gills and skeleton were not available for examination, and some doubt therefore remained as to whether it was truly the same species. Smith began a hunt for a second specimen that would take more than a decade.

Comoros

Preserved specimen of Latimeria chalumnae in the Natural History Museum, Vienna, Austria (length: 170 cm - weight: 60 kg). This specimen was caught on 18 October 1974, next to Salimani/Selimani (Grande Comore, Comoros Islands) 11°48′40.7″S 43°16′3.3″E / 11.811306°S 43.267583°E / -11.811306; 43.267583.

A worldwide search was launched for more coelacanths, with a reward of 100 British pounds, a very substantial sum to the average South African fisherman of the time. Fourteen years later, one specimen was found in the Comoros, but the fish was no stranger to the locals — in the port of Mutsamudu on the Comorian island of Anjouan, the Comorians were puzzled to be so rewarded for a "gombessa" or "mame", their names for the nearly inedible fish that their fishermen occasionally caught by mistake.

The second specimen, found in 1952 by Comorian fisherman Ahamadi Abdallah, was described as a different species, first as 'Malania hunti' and later as Malania anjounae, after Daniel François Malan, the South African Prime Minister who had dispatched an SAAF Dakota at the behest of Professor Smith to fetch the specimen. It was later discovered that the lack of a first dorsal fin, at first thought to be significant, was caused by an injury early in the specimen's life. Ironically, Malan was a staunch creationist; when he was first shown the primitive creature, he exclaimed, with a twinkle, "My, it is ugly. Do you mean to say we once looked like that?"[10] The specimen retrieved by Smith is on display at the SAIAB in Grahamstown, South Africa where he worked.

The Comorians are now aware of the significance of the endangered species, and have established a program to return accidentally-caught coelacanth to deep water.

As for Smith, who died in 1968, his account of the coelacanth story appeared in the book Old Fourlegs, first published in 1956. His book Sea Fishes of the Indian Ocean, illustrated and co-authored by his wife Margaret, remains the standard ichthyological reference for the region.

In 1988, National Geographic photographer Hans Fricke was the first to photograph the species in its natural habitat, 180 metres (590 ft) off Grande Comore's west coast.[11]

Second species in Indonesia

On September 18, 1997, Arnaz and Mark Erdmann, traveling in Indonesia on their honeymoon, saw a strange fish enter the market at Manado Tua, on the island of Sulawesi.[5] Mark thought it was a gombessa (Comoros coelacanth), although it was brown, not blue. An expert noticed their pictures on the Internet and realized its significance. Subsequently, the Erdmanns contacted local fishermen and asked for any future catches of the fish to be brought to them. A second Indonesian specimen, 1.2 m in length and weighing 29 kg., was captured alive on July 30, 1998.[7] It lived for six hours, allowing scientists to photographically document its coloration, fin movements and general behavior. The specimen was preserved and donated to the Museum Zoologicum Bogoriense (MZB), part of the Indonesian Institute of Sciences (LIPI).[5]

DNA testing revealed that this specimen differed genetically from the Comorian population. Superficially, the Indonesian coelacanth, locally called raja laut ("King of the Sea"), appears to be the same as those found in the Comoros except that the background coloration of the skin is brownish-gray rather than bluish. This fish was described in a 1999 issue of Environmental Biology of Fishes by Pouyaud et al. It was given the scientific name Latimeria menadoensis. A molecular study estimated the divergence time between the two coelacanth species to be 40–30 mya.[12]

On May 19, 2007, Justinus Lahama, an Indonesian fisherman, caught a 1.3-metre-long, 50kg/110 pound coelacanth off the coast near Manado, on northern Sulawesi Island near Bunaken National Marine Park. After spending 30 minutes out of water, the fish, still alive, was placed in a netted pool in front of a restaurant at the edge of the sea. It survived for 17 hours. Coelacanths, closely related to lungfish, usually live at depths of 200-1,000 metres. The fish was filmed by local authorities swimming in the metre-deep pool, then frozen after it died. AFP claim French, Japanese and Indonesian scientists working with the French Institute for Development and Research carried out a necropsy on the coelacanth with genetic analysis to follow. The local university is now studying the carcass.[13][8]

St. Lucia Marine Protected Area in South Africa

In South Africa, the search continued on and off over the years. 46-year-old diver Riaan Bouwer lost his life searching for coelacanths in June 1998.

On the 28th of October 2000, just south of the Mozambique border in Sodwana Bay in the St. Lucia Marine Protected Area, three deep-water divers, Pieter Venter, Peter Timm, and Etienne le Roux, made a dive to 104 metres and unexpectedly spotted a coelacanth.

Calling themselves "SA Coelacanth Expedition 2000", the group returned with photographic equipment and several additional members. On the 27th of November, after an unsuccessful initial dive the previous day, four members of the group, Pieter Venter, Gilbert Gunn, Christo Serfontein, and Dennis Harding, found three coelacanths. The largest was between 1.5 and 1.8 metres in length; the other two were from 1 to 1.2 metres. The fish swam head-down and appeared to be feeding from the cavern ledges. The group returned with video footage and photographs of the coelacanths.

During the dive, however, Serfontein lost consciousness, and 34-year-old Dennis Harding rose to the surface with him in an uncontrolled ascent. Harding complained of neck pains and died from a cerebral embolism while on the boat. Serfontein recovered after being taken underwater for decompression sickness treatment.

In March–April of 2002, the Jago Submersible and Fricke Dive Team descended into the depths off Sodwana and observed fifteen coelacanths. A dart probe was used to collect tissue samples.

The shallowest recorded sighting of a coelacanth is at a depth of 58 m off the coast of Sodwana Bay by Christo Vanjaarsveld.

Tanzania

Coelacanths have been caught off the coast of Tanzania since 2004. Two coelacanths were initially reported captured in Kigombe, a small village off the edge of the Indian Ocean in August 2004. A spate of 19 more specimens of these extremely rare fishes weighing between 25 kg. to 80 kg. were reported netted in the space of the next 5 months, with another specimen captured in January 2005. A coelacanth weighing as much as 110 kg. was reported by the Observer newspaper in 2006. Officials of the Tanga Coastal Zone Conservation and Development Programme, which has a long-term strategy for protecting the species, see a connection with the timing of the captures with trawling - especially by Japanese vessels - near the coelacanth's habitat, as within a couple of days of trawlers casting their nets coelacanths have turned up in shallow-water fishing nets intended for sharks. The sudden appearance of the coelacanth off Tanzania that has raised real worries about its future due to damage done to the coelacanth population by the effects of indiscriminate trawling methods and habitat damage.[14]

Hassan Kolombo, a programme co-ordinator, said. "Once we do not have trawlers, we don't get the coelacanths, it's as simple as that." His colleague, Solomon Makoloweka, said they had been pressuring the Tanzanian government to limit trawlers' activities. He said: "I suppose we should be grateful to these trawlers, because they have revealed this amazing and unique fish population. But we are concerned they could destroy these precious things. We want the government to limit their activity and to help fund a proper research program so that we can learn more about the coelacanths and protect them."[14]

Taxonomy

A preserved Coelacanth specimen in the Natural History Museum, London
In Late Devonian vertebrate speciation, descendants of pelagic lobe-finned fish – like Eusthenopteron – exhibited a sequence of adaptations: Descendants also included pelagic lobe-finned fish such as coelacanth species.

Subclass Coelacanthimorpha (Actinistia) are sometimes used to designate the group of Sarcopterygian fish that contains the Coelacanthiformes. The following is a classification of known coelacanth genera and families:[7]

Class Sarcopterygii
Subclass Coelacanthimorpha

The coelacanth in popular culture


The coelacanths' widely-published status as a "living fossil" earned it a place in music, video games, literature, and television. "Coelacanth" is the title of songs and albums by bands including John Fahey, Shriekback, Mr. Children and Polysics. Coelacanths are also heavily featured in video games. The coelacanth appears in games such as Animal Crossing,[15], Megaman X2, SEGA Marine Fishing, E.V.O.: Search for Eden (dubbed "Coelafish"), We Love Katamari, Me and My Katamari, and Endless Ocean. The Coelacanth was also the inspiration for the Pokémon Relicanth,[16] the Digimon Coelamon, (a flying Coelacanth), and bosses in the Darius series.[17]

In Margaret Atwood's novel Oryx and Crake, the coelacanth is used as a symbol for the underground scientific association Extinctathon. In Dirk Gently's Holistic Detective Agency, Professor Chronotis admits to causing the extinction of the dodos by trying to save the Coelacanth. In Lee Battersby's Father Muerte and the Rain, coelacanths rain from the sky when an ancient butterfly is stolen from its home time. The reference to the Latimeria Chalumnae is also a recurring one in Anne Landsman's novel, The Rowing Lesson, which is set, in part, in pre-World War II South Africa. Specific reference is made to the coelacanth's discovery as part of the narrative and as an allegorical reference to one's connection with the past.

Interröbang Cartel's works include the album (in progess) Bad Coelacanth and the song Prelude to the Afternoon of a Coelacanth.[18]

The Transformers character Skalor, one of the Seacons, has an alternate mode based on the coelacanth.

Coelocanths have featured in film and TV series such as Atlantis: The Lost Empire, Monster on the Campus and Futurama.

The sculptress Jeanne Grut produced two faience figures of coelacanths for the Royal Copenhagen porcelain manufactory in a series known as 'Blue Fish'. Originally made in 1963, these are still produced today.[19]

Finally, coelacanths have been used as symbols in objects and as nicknames. "Les Coelecantes" (meaning "the Coelacanths") is a nickname for the Comoros national football team. Coelacanths have been shown on coins,[20] phone cards,[21] and beer bottles.[22]

References

  1. ^ Reference for divergence dated on mitochondrial genome
  2. ^ Erdmann, Mark V. (April 1999). "An Account of the First Living Coelacanth known to Scientists from Indonesian Waters". Environmental Biology of Fishes. Volume 54 (#4). Springer Netherlands: 439–443. doi:10.1023/A:1007584227315. 0378-1909 (Print) 1573-5133 (Online). Retrieved 2007-05-18. {{cite journal}}: |volume= has extra text (help); Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  3. ^ A fossil coelacanth jaw found in a stratum datable 410 mya that was collected near Buchan in Victoria, Australia's East Gippsland, currently holds the record for oldest coelacanth; it was given the name Eoactinistia foreyi when it was published in September 2006. [1]
  4. ^ page 200, Weinberg, Samantha. 2006. A Fish Caught in Time: the Search for the Coelacanth. HarperCollins Publishers, New York, NY.
  5. ^ a b c Jewett, Susan L., "On the Trail of the Coelacanth, a Living Fossil", The Washington Post, 1998-11-11, Retrieved on 2007-06-19.
  6. ^ Iziko South African Museum, Cape Town
  7. ^ a b c Nelson, Joseph S. (2006). Fishes of the World. John Wiley & Sons, Inc. ISBN 0471250317
  8. ^ a b Reuters (2007), "Indonesian fisherman nets ancient fish", Reuters UK, 2007-05-21, Retrieved on 2007-07-16.
  9. ^ Reuters (2007), "Zanzibar fishermen land ancient fish",yahoo.com, 2007-07-15, Retrieved on 2007-07-16.
  10. ^ page 73, Weinberg, Samantha. 2006. A Fish Caught in Time: the Search for the Coelacanth. HarperCollins Publishers, New York, NY.
  11. ^ Fricke, Hans (June, 1988). "Coelacanths:The fish that time forgot". National Geographic. 173 (6): 824–828. doi:10.1023/A:1007584227315. {{cite journal}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  12. ^ Inoue J.G., Miya M., Venkatesh B., Nishida M. 2005. The mitochondrial genome of Indonesian coelacanth Latimeria menadoensis (Sarcopterygii: Coelacanthiformes) and divergence time estimation between the two coelacanths. Gene 349: 227-235
  13. ^ "Ancient Indonesian fish is 'living fossil'", Cosmos Online, 2007-07-29.
  14. ^ a b "Dinosaur fish pushed to the brink by deep-sea trawlers", The Observer, 2006-01-08, Retrieved on 2007-06-18.
  15. ^ "Nintendocanth"
  16. ^ "Relicanth". Retrieved on 2007-1-13.
  17. ^ Cyber Coelacanth. Retrieved on 2007-1-13].
  18. ^ Haller, Jacob, Interröbang Cartel MP3s, retrieved 2008-09-10
  19. ^ 'Blue Fish' series, Royal Copenhagen website. Retrieved: June 13, 2008.
  20. ^ "Coincanth". Retrieved on 2007-1-13.
  21. ^ "Phonecanth". 2007-1-13.
  22. ^ "Beercanth". Retrieved on 2007-1-13.

See also

External links

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