Smithsonian Insider – New study proves the remora’s sucker disc is in fact a highly modified dorsal fin / Q&A with taxonomist David Johnson (2024)

By John Barrat

Few fish in the sea sport an odder appendage than the remora, which grows a suction cup on the top of its head. Widely known as the “sharksucker,” these fish evade the work of swimming by affixing their suction disc to larger creatures—whales, sharks, sea turtles—and then hitchhiking along for the ride. Whenever its host tears into a meal, say a shark chomping a seal, the remora makes a picnic of the floating scraps.

Recently, in a paper describing the remora’s suction disc as “one of the most remarkable and most highly modified skeletal structures among vertebrates” David Johnson of the Smithsonian’s National Museum of Natural History and Ralf Britz of the Natural History Museum, London, proved definitively that this strange appendage is in fact the remora’s dorsal fin, albeit wildly altered. Here Johnson, a taxonomist at the Smithsonian, answers a few questions regarding the remora and its suction disc.

Q. Many people have studied the remora, but you and Ralf Britz are the first to prove its suction disc is a modified dorsal fin. How did that come about?

A. The idea that the sucker disc is developed from the dorsal fin [the fin at the top] is not new and dates to the early 1800s. Since then, many scientists have suggested it was derived from the dorsal fin but nobody before us had studied the development of the remora from its earliest larval stages. One reason I think this hasn’t been done before is due to the difficulty in finding early stage remora larvae.

In our study we closely tracked the development of the sucking disc beginning with tiny remora larvae, through to juvenile and adult remoras. We followed the earliest stages of the disc’s development by matching the first vestiges of elements of the sucking disc with the first vestiges of elements of the spinous dorsal fins of another fish, the White Perch, genus Morone, with a typical spinous dorsal fin. By doing this we were successfully able to identify which of three main fin elements—the distal radials, the proximal-middle radials, and the fin spines—are radically modified and develop into the different elements of the remora’s unusual disc.

This image shows three stages of sucking disc development in Remora as seen from above. (A) is the species Remora brachyptera; (B & C) is the species Remora remora.

Q. What do remora larvae look like?

A. Like most larvae of marine fishes remora larvae appear quite different from the adults of their species. They hatch with no sucker disc and it develops as they mature, traveling forward from the anterior part of the back to the top of the fish’s head. The larvae of most marine fishes really exist in a different evolutionary arena, living in plankton in the top 200 meters of the ocean’s surface. It’s totally different there and the larvae have adaptations for living in the plankton layer that they lose as they mature. For a fish taxonomist like me these early developmental stages are where the action is.

One interesting point: remora larvae before developing their disc have very distinctive hooked teeth protruding from the lower jaw. Because remora larvae at this stage are relatively rare in plankton collections, I have often wondered, although we don’t have any evidence for it, if maybe remora larvae are not free living in the plankton layer but go into the gill cavities of fishes and using their hooked teeth, hanging on there until they develop a disc.

Q. Where did you find remora larvae?

A. Finding tiny, juvenile remora specimens was critical to this study. In 2004, I spent seven weeks in Tokyo at the National Museum of nature and Science going through jars of tiny plankton specimens collected by Japanese scientists during the 1950s through to 1980 during a study of the spawning grounds of tunas and billfishes. The specimens were unsorted and there was a lot of material to sort through. Anytime I found a juvenile remora small enough so that its disc wasn’t fully developed, I picked it out asked that it be shipped to me along with many other larvae I borrowed from those collections. For our study we had to get back to the stages where the sucker disc is only about 1 millimeter long and earlier to observe how it develops. Later we also obtained a few tiny larvea from collections of the Souteast National Marine Fisheries Laboratory in Miami.

Q. How do you see the bones and connective tissue in tiny fish larvae?

A. We use a chemical process known as clearing and staining, in which a chemical called trypsin is used to dissolve a specimen’s muscle tissue. The specimen is then placed in the chemicals alcian blue, which stains the cartilage blue, and alizarin red, which stains their bones red. The specimen is then placed in glycerine, rendering the remaining tissue clear. This method is critical to my work, as it gives us a fully articulated specimen in which we can clearly see and photograph, through a microscope, the development of a fish’s skeleton from the very first forming of its cartilage.

Q. Is the remora considered a parasite?

A. No. Remoras are not really doing anything except hitchhiking on the shark. It is just a hitchhiker, it conserves energy that way.

Q. Do people eat remoras?

A. I’ve often wondered about that, I’d like to try them sometime. I’ve asked people if they have eaten them and I’ve never found anybody who has. I don’t see why they wouldn’t be OK to eat although there is probably not a large amount of meat on them.

“Ontogeny and hom*ology of the Skeletal Elements That Form the Sucking Disc of Remoras (Teleostei, Echeneoidei, Echeneidae),” by Ralf Britz and G. David Johnson was published in the December 2012 issue of the Journal of Morphology.

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Tags: fishes, National Museum of Natural History, new species, osteology

Smithsonian Insider – New study proves the remora’s sucker disc is in fact a highly modified dorsal fin / Q&A with taxonomist David Johnson (2024)

FAQs

Do remoras use suction? ›

Remora fishes are famed hitchhikers of the marine world, possessing high-powered suction disks on the back of their head for attaching themselves in torpedo-like fashion to larger hosts that can provide food and safety — from whales and sharks to boats and divers.

Are remoras parasites? ›

The Remora is not considered to be a parasite, despite its being attached to the host. Instead they are considered to have a commensal relationship with their host, since they do not hurt the host and are just along for the ride.

What do remora fish do for sharks? ›

The remora fish usually attach to the shark's underbelly and eat scraps of prey dropped by the shark. They benefit the shark by eating parasites on the shark's skin and mouth that would otherwise irritate and harm the shark.

Can you eat sucker fish? ›

The White Suckers were highly valued as a food fish. Fishermen caught them in early spring about two months before the salmon start spawning. The bones of the White Sucker skull are not fully fused and fall apart when cooked.

What are some interesting facts about remoras? ›

The Remora uses a sucking disc on the top of its head to obtain rides from other animals such as large sharks and sea turtles. They feed on leftover food fragments of their host. In ancient times, sailors believed that the Remora could stop a ship from sailing.

Can remora harm humans? ›

Remoras have been known to attach to a diver's tank or body. As long as the diver is covered by a wetsuit, the remora does no harm.

Are remoras harmful? ›

No known negative impacts for humans are known. Remoras are occasionally caught as fishing bycatch and put in aquaria. Remoras have been used in fishing – one method involves tying fishing line to the remora, then waiting for it to cling to a larger fish.

Does the remora cause any harm? ›

Because remoras cause no damage to their shark host, they are not considered parasitic—but the relationship isn't symbiotic either, since the sharks don't get much back from remoras, unless of course sharks find amusem*nt in the fishes' odd, upside-down, disc-shaped heads.

Why don't sharks eat remora? ›

As such, they are not considered to be a parasite, since their relationship is commensal; one animal benefits, one derives neither benefit nor harm. The remora fish also eats parasites off the shark's body that would otherwise bother the shark, hence the shark's willingness to let the remora fish remain.

What is the lifespan of a remora? ›

The lifespan of Remoras varies among species but generally ranges from 2 to 8 years. Reproduction involves the release of buoyant eggs that float in open water until they hatch into larval Remoras.

Do remora annoy sharks? ›

No. The remora fish has convinced sharks not to do this by showing the shark how beneficial they are. Although some might say the shark gets no benefit from the remora fish, they do.

What if a remora sticks to you? ›

The remoras are safely released. This is also not dangerous or harmful. The mark is not painful nor dangerous.

Do remora fish have a disk on their head? ›

Remoras eat stray bits of food that sharks leave, and they also feed on tiny parasites (shrimp-like) that are present on the skin of sharks. These fishes have a rounded disc on their heads which have flexible membranes to maintain suction. They use this disc to obtain rides from other sea creatures.

What fish use suction? ›

Few fish in the sea sport an odder appendage than the remora, which grows a suction cup on the top of its head. Widely known as the “sharksucker,” these fish evade the work of swimming by affixing their suction disc to larger creatures—whales, sharks, sea turtles—and then hitchhiking along for the ride.

How do remora fish work? ›

The remora is a small fish that usually measures between one and three feet long. Their front dorsal fins evolved over time into an organ that sits like a suction cup on the top of their heads. This organ allows the remora to attach to a passing shark, usually on the shark's belly or underside.

How does a remora suction cup work? ›

The latest research shows that the cup, which is actually a modified dorsal fin, is lined with tiny barbs that create friction between the two surfaces. Large blood vessels running just under the organ also help by providing pressure against the host.

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