Shelf Life 03: Six Ways To Prepare a Coelacanth

It would be like someone calls up with a picture of a Tyrannosaurus saying, “This was running around the vegetable patch. Is it interesting?” Yeah, it was.

-Melanie L. J. Stiassny, Curator, Division of Vertebrate Zoology

Collage of various pieces of text and some illustrations of dinosaur and fish. Most prominent, centered text reads "Loch Ness Outdone."

Among the sharks and seaweed caught in the nets of a South African trawler on December 22, 1938, there lay a large blue fish, dappled with white spots. Its armor-like scales and lobed fins recalled a group of fishes that scientists thought had died out 70 million years ago. As it turned out, reports of the coelacanth’s extinction had been greatly exaggerated. 

Illustration of a fish against bright circular background.
Auckland Star, 22 April 1939, "Loch Ness Outdone"
Reproduced from paperspast.natlib.govt.nz by permission of the National Library of New Zealand

The fish’s rediscovery caused a stir around the globe. “Loch Ness Outdone,” proclaimed the Aukland Star. A curator here at the Museum called it “one of the events of a lifetime.” More than 75 years later, the coelacanth continues to be one of the world’s most intriguing species. The Museum’s Ichthyology and Paleontology collections house several specimens of Latimeria chalumnae (the West Indian Ocean coelacanth) and its ancient fossil relatives.

Paleontological Vanishing Act

For a fish once considered a possible “missing link” between aquatic and land vertebrates, it’s perhaps ironic that the coelacanth was first described in 1839 by Louis Agassiz—an influential biologist who rejected Darwinian evolution. (Darwin once wrote: “How very singular it is that so eminently clever a man, with such immense knowledge on many branches of Natural History, should write such wonderful stuff & bosh as he does.”) Agassiz was, however, a talented paleontologist and described Coelacanthus from a fossilized tail.

Fish specimen on a tray with a label reading Department of Vertebrate Paleontology: 11759 Axelrodichthys Araripensis.
Museum Curator John Maisey described the Cretaceous coelacanth Axelrodichthys. This type specimen from the Museum's collection is approximately 28 inches long.

The first coelacanths appear in the fossil record as far back as 415-360 million years ago, when they shared the ancient oceans with ancestors of modern sharks, rays, and other fishes. As new species evolved, ancient coelacanths inhabited both marine and freshwater environments. The biggest coelacanths—like the massive Mawsonia, over 5 meters long—lived 110 million years ago in the Cretaceous lakes and rivers of South America and West Africa, which were then a single continent.

Paleontology Curator John Maisey discovered a slightly smaller coelacanth contemporary of Mawsonia and named it Axelrodichthys. “Axelrodichthys and Mawsonia were similar to living coelacanths in many ways,” says Maisey. “For example, the Cretaceous coelacanths had a diamond-shaped tail and a spiny first dorsal fin on the back, but unlike the modern species, had highly ornamented bones on their heads and no teeth.”

Caption: Restoration of entire fish, except for neutral arches of trunk. Body outline indicated by short dashes; swim bladder denoted by long dashes.
Novitates/© AMNH

The coelacanths hang in the fossil record through the time of the dinosaurs, then disappear about 70 million years ago, never returning to shallow seas, lakes, or rivers. This vanishing act may have to do with their environment and the surrounding geography. The steep undersea slopes inhabited by modern coelacanths don’t offer the best conditions for fossilization, and active plate movement in the region may destroy any fossils that happen to form.

It Came From the Deep...

Almost a hundred years after Agassiz first described this ancient group of fishes, coelacanths splashed into the modern era. The specimen pulled from the trawling nets of a South African fishing boat in 1938 was discovered by Marjorie Courtenay-Latimer, the curator of the East London Museum in South Africa. Courtenay-Latimer had taken over the Museum seven years earlier, at the age of 24, and while she’d never had formal scientific training she was a perceptive self-taught naturalist. The scales, head plates, and fin formation of this strange fish reminded her of  ancient specimens, and she decided to contact J. L. B. Smith, a lecturer and ichthyologist at Rhodes University.

Woman stands behind large coelacanth fish specimen.
The discoverer of the coelacanth, Marjorie Courtenay-Latimer, is pictured with her fishy find.
via Wikimedia

Since this fishy drama unfolded around the Christmas holidays, Smith proved difficult to track down. Meanwhile, it was summertime in South Africa, and the heat was taking its toll on the specimen. With the help of an asisstant, Courtenay-Latimer pushed the coelacanth carcass through sweltering East London streets in search of a cool storage spot. Turned down by the local mortuary and a food refrigeration facility, they ended up at a taxidermist’s, where they wrapped the fish in formalin-soaked newspapers and hoped for the best. 

When Courtenay-Latimer finally received a reply from Smith 11 days later, it was too late to save the soft parts of the fish. But the skeleton and skin remained. Based on Courtenay-Latimer’s description, Smith thought this specimen was indeed the fish that had long been considered extinct. It wasn’t until February 16, 1939, that he finally reached East London to  confirm his suspicions. “Although I had come prepared,” Smith later wrote, “that first sight hit me like a white-hot blast and made me feel shaky and queer.... Yes, there was not a shadow of a doubt, scale by scale, bone by bone, fin by fin, it was a true Coelacanth.”

Poster reading Premio £100 Reward Recompense, plus text regarding reward written in Spanish, English & French and a coelacanth photograph at center.
Flyers like this one from the Museum’s Rare Book Collection were posted up and down the coast of East Africa in the 1940s and ‘50s. They offered a £100 reward for an intact specimen.

Smith and his wife Margaret spent the next 14 years searching for another specimen. With the support of Courtenay-Latimer, they printed and distributed thousands of leaflets offering a reward for an intact fish. “Look carefully at this fish,” the poster proclaimed in English and Portuguese. “It may bring you good fortune. Note the peculiar double tail, and the fins....every one is valuable for scientific purposes and you will be well paid.” 

Monsieur le Professeur

The reward was at last claimed in 1952, by Ahamadi Abdallah, a fisherman from the Comoro Islands. J. L. B. Smith convinced the South African government to sponsor a plane for the coelacanth’s retrieval and returned with the specimen to great fanfare. During a national radio broadcast, he recounted opening the crate and weeping as he saw the big fish before him—and broke into tears anew. Again, the coelacanth made headlines around the world, and letters poured in from well-wishers. One ichthyologist wrote to Smith from the U.S.:  “Now I can die happy, for I have lived to see the great American public excited about fish."

Over the next decade, several other coelacanth specimens were collected in the Comoran archipelago, all of which were shipped to French researchers. (The Comoros were a colony of France until 1975.) Dr. Jacques Millot led a project that would span more than 20 years, culminating in a three-volume monograph on coelacanth anatomy in 1978.

Now I can die happy, for I have lived to see the great American public excited about fish.

Despite the worldwide fish fever, no coelacanth specimen had yet made it to the Western Hemisphere. Then in 1962, Bobb Schaeffer, a paleontology curator at the American Museum of Natural History, received an urgent letter from J. L. B. Smith. Smith had gotten word from a French doctor in the Comoros that a coelacanth specimen was available.

Collage of 3 Western Union telegrams. Center telegram reads "Lt Dr. Schaeffer, American Museum NYK. Fish Not Decomposed. Stop." plus additional text.

“Monsieur le Professeur,” the French physician Dr. Georges Garrouste wrote to Schaeffer, [the coelacanth is] “a very beautiful specimen— female, I think—and certainly the most beautiful I have ever seen.” A flurry of letters and telegrams crossed the Atlantic, as the prospect of adding a coelacanth to the Museum’s collection began to take shape. Schaeffer wanted assurance that the fish was well preserved. He also wanted to make sure that the Museum’s acquisition would be acceptable to Dr. Millot, the French scientist who had not yet published his coelacanth research. With confirmation of the specimen’s good condition and Millot’s encouragement, soon-to-be catalog number 32949 arrived at the Museum in April, 1962—the Western Hemisphere’s very first coelacanth.

Two people in shirt and ties, wearing gloves, carry a coelacanth specimen onto a table.
Specimen I-32949 arrived at the Museum in April 1962.
© AMNH

It’s a girl! …and a boy, and a girl, and a girl, and another boy.

For the next 13 years, 32949 sat in a tank in the Ichthyology Department—admired, but largely untouched. That would all change with a request from Dr. Charles Rand, a Long Island hematologist who was interested in obtaining tissue samples for comparative research. After some careful consideration, the Museum’s scientists agreed to go into the belly of the fish. On the morning of September 10, 1975, Rand, along with Bobb Schaeffer and Ichthyology Curators James Atz and C. Lavett Smith, began dissecting the coelacanth—and made an astonishing discovery.

Elbows-deep in fish innards, Smith and Rand found three embryonic coelacanths—1-foot-long versions of their mother, with yolk sacs still attached. Two more embryos were found in subsequent dissection, and the Museum’s population of coelacanths sextupled in short order. Researchers had long debated whether the fish laid eggs or gave birth to live young, and the 1975 dissection finally put the reproductive mystery to rest.

Close-up of a person's hands holding a fish specimen, with one hand handling the fin.
During the dissection of the coelacanth specimen, Museum scientists discovered five 1-foot-long embryonic coelacanths. 
© AMNH

The hematologist, Dr. Rand, was so inspired by the ichthyological revelation that he penned a libretto for a short operetta, A Coelacanth’s Lament, or Quintuplets At 50 Fathoms Can Be Fun, set to Gilbert and Sullivan tunes. Here’s a selection from Act One, to be sung to the melody of The Mikado’s Tit Willow:”

(Disclaimer: The Museum takes no responsibility for the quality of rhyme.)

Text: The Coelacanth sat and unburdened her heart sighing, "fossil, oh fossil, I'm a fossil." It's evident that 'neath my two-chambered heart...etc.

Natural History 

The specimens collected since the species’ discovery in 1938 have been thoroughly studied, yet in some ways the coelacanth remains an enigmatic animal. A second species was discovered in Indonesia in 1997, and scientists are slowly learning more about the fish’s range and biology. Latimeria chalumnae, the West Indian Ocean coelacanth, was listed as an endangered species by CITES in 2000, so preserving existing specimens in museums and institutional collections around the world for future study is more important than ever.

Detail of coelacanth, emphasis on head and teeth.
Coelacanths have been widely studied since their discovery in 1938.
Courtesy of Phil Dragasg/Wikimedia

As a fish first known from the fossil record, the coelacanth has a well-studied skeleton. “There are so many extraordinary features about the coelacanth,” says Axelrod Research Curator Melanie L. J. Stiassny, “but one of the most remarkable is that it’s the only living vertebrate with what’s called an intercranial joint. The back half of the skull is actually physically separated from the front half of the skull, enabling the coelacanth to really get a big gape. It’s like if your dog was able to lift its snout up, and it hinged on the back of its skull.”

Close-up on a person's hands handling a curved and sinewy textured intercranial joint specimen.
Among the coelacanth's remarkable characteristics is its intercranial joint, which allows the fish to have a big gape. It is the only living vertebrate with this anatomical feature.
D. Finnin/© AMNH

The lobed, limb-like fins of the coelacanth are also highly distinctive features, part of the reason the fish was an early candidate for a “missing link” between water and land vertebrates. Once coelacanths were finally observed in the wild in 1987, researchers learned that their fin movement is patterned in the same sequence as the gait of a quadruped. However, they do not use their fins to crawl along the seafloor, as J. L. B. Smith had expected.

Person's hands hold and examine a pale fish specimen.
 The coelacanth has lobed, limb-like fins.

Another anatomical feature that’s been illuminated by living coelacanth behavior is the animal’s rostral organ—a large cavity above the nasal sacs, which is connected to three openings on the head and filled with a jelly-like substance. This feature is unique to coelacanths among all living vertebrates and likely functions as a kind of electro-receptor, detecting low-frequency signals given off by potential prey. Coelacanths have often been seen performing a sort of headstand, holding their snouts (and therefore rostral organs) close to the seabed. Researchers noticed they could spur this behavior by generating small currents in the nearby water.

So, is the coelacanth our ancestor? The short answer is no. Its full genome was sequenced in 2013, and the results, along with much study of coelacanth anatomy and the fossil record, suggest that the modern lungfish is a closer relative to land vertebrates. But questions remain as to its range (there are tantalizing hints of coelacanths in the Atlantic), its reproduction (how do coelacanths mate?), and its population size, among many others. But whether or not we can call the coelacanth a great-grandma, it remains a fascinating fish.