Early juvenile snubnosed eels feed on
epibenthic copepods (
Tharybis spp.) and
amphipods. However, this eel is more notorious for its parasitic habits, which are often repeated in literature.
Frank Thomas Bullen, in the 1904
Denizens of the Deep, wrote that the eel "attaches himself to the bodies of the larger, fleshier fish, such as
halibut, and by sheer force of suction and boring withal works his ravenous way right into their bodies, at what misery to his involuntary hosts can only be imagined."
Spencer Fullerton Baird reported that the eels are "not unfrequently found nestling along the
backbone of the halibut and
cod, where they seem to have the power of abiding for some time without actually causing death." Baird also made note of the eels' supposed habit of burrowing into the abdominal cavities of netted,
gravid shad and eating their eggs within the span of "a few minutes". In 1992, two snubnose eels were discovered inside the
heart of a
shortfin mako shark (
Isurus oxyrhinchus) landed at
Montauk, New York. The two eels, both immature females, measured long and had fed on
blood, with histiological evidence suggesting that they had been there long enough for
arteriosclerosis and
hyperplasia (indicative of circulatory obstruction or toxicity from metabolic wastes), and tissue regeneration to occur. The authors speculated that the eels had burrowed into the shark through the gills or throat (the precise path of entry could not be determined, possibly obscured by damage caused by the tow rope) after it had been weakened on the capture line, entered the
circulatory system, and then made their way to the heart. Despite records of its parasitic behavior,
submersible encounters with free-swimming juveniles and adults, and their capture in baited traps, suggest that this species is at most a facultative parasite that opportunistically enters sick and dying fish. Reproduction is
oviparous. The
eggs are likely pelagic, measuring at least across, and lack an oil globule. An
ovary from one female examined contained about 30,000 eggs. Like all other eels, the snubnosed eel undergoes a
leptocephalus larval stage that
metamorphoses into a juvenile form resembling the adult. Leptocephali belonging to this species have yet to be identified, but based on the appearance of the metamorphic stage, they likely have long bodies with short heads and small mouths, and little to no body
pigmentation. Metamorphic fish are white, with the black
peritoneum clearly visible; one known metamorphic specimen measured long. Sexual maturation is attained at around a length of . The
trematode Hypertrema ambovatum is a known parasite of this species, infesting the
intestines. == Research ==