Mummichogs readily eat mosquito larvae and attempts have been made to use them as
biocontrol agents of mosquito populations.
Scientific utility Mummichogs are considered an important environmental
model organism because of their ability to tolerate various extremes of chemical (
pollution, etc.) and physical (temperature,
salinity, oxygen, etc.) conditions. They are relatively abundant in nature and can be easily captured, transported and reared in laboratory facilities. They are commonly used in scientific studies of stress biology, thermal physiology and
toxicology, and have also been studied in the contexts of evolutionary biology, developmental biology,
endocrinology, cancer biology, and chronobiology (study of
circadian rhythms). With the successful sequencing and assembly of the full killifish genome, they serve as a premier scientific model for studying biochemical and physiological responses to varying environmental conditions. Their remarkable ability to tolerate various extremes of temperature and salinity has made them popular subjects in scientific studies of
toxicology. For decades the killifish has been a useful laboratory model for toxicological studies that include exposures to single chemicals, chemical mixtures, and complex contaminated media. It is sometimes the only fish species found in severely polluted and oxygen-deprived waterways, such as the
Elizabeth River in Virginia and, in New Jersey, the
Hackensack River and the
Arthur Kill. A 2008
Virginia Institute of Marine Science report stated that 38% of mummichogs from Elizabeth River had cancerous lesions, and "more than half had pre-cancerous lesions. That was largely due to high levels of
polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons". Killifish eggs are used in developmental studies and when teaching embryology because the eyes, the beating heart, and the different stages of
ontogenesis can be easily examined. Embryos are also extremely durable and easy to manipulate in the laboratory. In 1973 a couple of them were flown in a plastic bag aquarium aboard
Skylab, during the
Skylab 3 mission. In the absence of gravity the fish at first exhibited an unusual swimming behavior: they constantly pitched forward and therefore described tight circles. However, by day 22 of the mission they swam normally. Fifty eggs at an advanced stage of development had also been taken on board, and 48 of them hatched during the flight. The hatchlings swam normally. More experiments with mummichogs in space followed as part of the
Apollo–Soyuz Test Project and as part of a biological package aboard the
Bion 3/Kosmos 782 satellite. == See also ==