Nature magazine - June 1930.
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Nature magazine - June 1930.

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The Tooth of a Megalodon Megaselachus megalodon
Early Pliocene (approx. 5 million years ago). West Java, Indonesia.
6 by 4 inches (15 x 9.5 cm).
A large tooth with intact serrations, a rusty brown bourlette, and an enamel with a patina of various tans and ivory. Surface erosion is present on the sand-colored root.
Remember I said this young wolf fish is special? This is his idea of hiding. As you can see, he is very hidden. Right?

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I did take some video today. He’s starting to show interest again in people, which is a good sign.
Wolf Fish really don’t take the transport home all that well, ever. It took Hot Pot two weeks to finally trust me and take food from the tongs. Other then being a bit “special”in the head he’s a good fish.
I want to apologize for the long period of not posting about the fate of the column tank. My family insisted we keep the tank up, and really wanted to give it another go with the same species. So I took home the wolf fish that had been at my place of work for several months.
So meet Hot Pocket, or Hot Pot for short. He came in as a tiny baby, doubled in size at work and wasn’t pretty enough for most customers (but pretty enough for my folks back at home!).
He’s...not a terribly smart fish. I’m currently dealing with him jumping in the mornings, but I have a solid top so it’s not like he can go anywhere. He’s been moody, shy, and distrustful after I caught him in a net and put him in a bag to bring him home.
Friday morning (today) marks the first day he’s accepted non-live, and he ate a whole piece of krill for me. He even rose up to accept it from the tongs, which means he still retains the training I went through with him at work. This is a really good sign.
I’m keeping a steady supply of guppies in his tank, to encourage him to be active, and discourage behaviors such as jumping. I’m sure given enough time he’ll settle down. He seems really interested in the light (which is what he mostly targets).
Hide and seek
So, Hot Pot, the small rainbow wolf-fish, really is a character. It seems every feeding is a little different. Today he wanted to play hide and seek. Not satisfied with just having the food offered to him on tongs, he instead needed line up a perfect ambush.
So I would offer, he would hit, let go, run and set up again. I’d spend five minutes finding him, offer again and he’d attempt, miss and swim off to hide again. It took another several minutes to find his new ambush point, offer again and finally he gets it good, rips the food ferociously off the tongs and horks it down in mere seconds.
It took me 10 minutes to feed one fish because he wanted to turn into the game! This is one of the things I admire about keeping a wolf-fish, they are intelligent and unpredictable little creatures.