Not all Anglerfish are deep sea fish. For the ones that are, a few have been brought to the surface but in many cases, they die not long after being brought up.
they usually die
Yes, blobfish can die when they are brought to the surface because they are adapted to survive in the high-pressure deep sea environment. When they are brought up to the surface, the sudden change in pressure can be harmful to their bodies, causing them to die.
Deep sea fish have adapted to high pressure environments and their bodies are able to function properly under those conditions. When they are suddenly brought to the surface, the rapid change in pressure can cause their swim bladders to expand and rupture, leading to internal injuries that can be fatal. Additionally, the sudden exposure to oxygen-rich surface waters can lead to gas supersaturation in their tissues, causing further harm.
Because the sea is deep. But some fish get zapped.
Some fish are surface fish and others are not. Without you saying what kind of fish it is that is at the surface it is impossible to say if anything is wrong. BUT! if the fish are breaking the surface and gasping for air, then you have a major water problem and need to do some very large water changes immediately. Otherwise your fish will die.
well first of all fish need water 24/7 so wut they do for water is that they jump up in the air and take a big deep,deep breath and die
yes/no/maybe so
I could find reference to only one. It is in the Oceanopolis in France. IT is very small and contains only shrimp and small crabs. Deep in the ocean, the pressures are enormous. Deep sea fish will die if exposed to the air pressure at the surface. They will pretty much explode, or their cells an organs will. They die. So they have to be kept under extremely high pressure. That is hard to do in large enclosures, as the _enclosure_will burst unless VERY strong. The forces on the enclosure go up as the surface area of the enclosure.
Depending on how the fish died but most float at the surface with there stomaches facing up.
As a deep-sea fish with little muscle, the blobfish eats any matter that floats in front of it or has fish waste on it.
deep sea monsters do not exist (i dont know if the loch ness monster exists) to my knowledge. but there are very bright coloured fish in the tropics. but to keep one you need sun-bed related heat in the fish tank, otherwise the fish could die.