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                          |  Selected Species Around the World  |  
                          | Broadgilled Hagfish                              - Eptatretus cirrhatus
      Brook Lamprey                               - Lampetra planeri
         Brown Hagfish - Paramyxine atami
    Cape Hagfish                              - Myxine capensis
        Carpathian Lamprey - Eudontomyzon danfordi
      Dwarf Hagfish- Myxine pequenoi
    Eightgilled Hagfish                              - Eptatretus octatrema
      Fivegill Hagfish                              - Eptatretus profundus
      Goliath Hagfish                              - Eptatretus goliath
      Greek Brook Lamprey                               - Eudontomyzon hellenicus
    
 |  | Lombardy Brook Lamprey - Lampetra zanandreai    Longfin Hagfish - Eptatretus longipinnis
      Lulua River Lamprey - Aplocheilichthys katangae
    Non-parasitic Lamprey - Mordacia praecox
    River Lamprey  - Lampetra fluviatilis
           Sixgill Hagfish - Eptatretus hexatrema
          Southern Hagfish - Myxine australis
      Strickrott's Hagfish - Eptatretus strickrotti
    Ukranian Brook Lamprey - Eudontomyzon mariae
         Vladykov's Lamprey - Eudontomyzon vladykovi
    White-headed Hagfish                          - Myxine ios
      |  Additional Information Key:   Profile  Photos  Video  Audio  NH Species American Brook Lamprey - Lampetra appendix            The American brook lamprey is found in the eastern U.S. and southeastern Canada.
 Source:US Geological Survey  Intended Audience: General Reading Level: Middle     School
 Atlantic Hagfish - Myxine   glutinosa                  The Atlantic hagfish is found on both sides of the north Atlantic Ocean.
 Source: Sea and Sky Intended Audience: Student Reading Level: Middle       School
 Atlantic Hagfish - Myxine   glutinosa                 The Atlantic hagfish  preys  on shrimp, worms, and small crabs
 Source: NOAA Intended Audience: General Reading Level: Middle       School
 Brook Lamprey - Lampetra planeri         The brook lamprey is found in small brooks, streams, lakes, and rivers across Europe.
 Source: Arkive Intended Audience: General Reading Level: Middle     School
 Northern Brook Lamprey - Ichthyomyzon fossor       Northern brook lamprey are found in many areas of the midwestern and northeastern United States.
 Source:  Animal Diversity Web Intended Audience: General Reading Level: Middle   School
 Southern Brook Lamprey - Ichthyomyzon gagei       Southern brook lampreys are found in the Mississippi River basin, the Tennessee River drainage, and Gulf of Mexico drainages.
 Source:  Animal Diversity Web Intended Audience: General Reading Level: Middle   School
 
 River Lamprey - Lampetra fluviatilis
            The river lamprey is found in western Europe from Sweden and Finland south to   France and east to Russia.
 Source: Arkive Intended Audience: General Reading Level: Middle     School
 
 Sea Lamprey - Petromyzon marinus
                The sea lamprey is found on both sides of the North Atlantic.
 Source: Arkive Intended Audience: General Reading Level: Middle     School
 Sea Lamprey - Petromyzon marinus                In North American the sea lamprey is found on the east coast of United States and Canada.
 Source: EEK - Environmental Education for Kids Intended Audience: Students Reading Level: Elementary      School
  Pacific Hagfish - Eptatretus stoutii          The Pacific hagfish is found on muddy bottoms in cold ocean waters along the Pacific Coast from Vancouver, Canada south to Baja California, Mexico.
 Source:  Animal Diversity Web Intended Audience: General Reading Level: Middle   School
  Pacific Hagfish - Eptatretus stoutii          The Pacific hagfish is also known as the slime eel.
 Source: Monterey Bay Aquarium Intended Audience: General Reading Level: Middle   School
 Pacific Hagfish - Eptatretus stoutii          The hagfish can tie itself into a knot.
 Source:    Aquarium of the Pacific Intended Audience: General Reading Level: Middle   School
 Pacific Hagfish - Eptatretus stoutii          Hagfish eat worms and invertebrates, but they also enter both dying and dead fish and eat them from the inside out.
 Source: Oregon Coast   Aquarium Intended Audience: General Reading Level: Middle   School
 Pacific Hagfish - Eptatretus stoutii          Hagfish have been around, mostly unchanged, since the Paleozoic era 450 million years ago.
 Source: California Department of Fish and Wildlife Intended Audience: General Reading Level: Middle   School
 Pacific Lamprey - Entosphenus tridentatus         The Pacific lamprey is born in fresh water, matures in the ocean, and returns to fresh water to reproduce. It dies after reproduction.
 Source:  U.S. Fish and Wildlife Intended Audience: General Reading Level: Middle   School
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