| Leedsichthys had over 40,000
teeth which were used to sieve small animals from the water. It is
probably the largest fish ever to have lived.
Type: Ray-finned fish
Size: Up to 27m
Diet: Carnivore
Predators: Liopleurodon, Metriorhynchus, Hybodus sharks
Lived: Late Jurassic, 165-155 million years ago
Leedsichthys was a giant fish that would have dwarfed every
other animal in the sea, but it was a gentle giant that lived on the
tiny shrimps, jellyfish and small fish that make up plankton. It
would have swum slowly through the upper waters of the ocean, taking
mouthfuls of plankton-rich water and sieving them through the giant
mesh-plates at the back of its mouth. Its feeding habits were
similar to the modern blue whale, which also survives on nothing but
plankton.
They probably traveled large distances to find parts of the
world where seasonal conditions caused plankton to form itself into
a dense concentrated organic soup. Once a year, and probably after
plankton feasts, Leedsichthys would have shed the giant filter
plates from the back of its mouth, meaning it was unable to feed
itself for several weeks, whilst the new ones grew back. Towards the
end of this time it would have become weakened through hunger and
vulnerable to attack.
The Jurassic seas in which Leedsichthys lived were a dangerous
place and despite its size, it had no formal means of defending
itself against predators such as Liopleurodon and Metriorhynchus.
One attack would be unlikely to kill a full-grown Leedsichthys, but
several predators could have inflicted fatal damage, leaving this
defenseless giant to die slowly from its wounds. |