Plainfin Midshipman: A Face Only a Father Could Love

See photos of the plainfin midshipman—a fish with lots to teach us about paternity and contaminants in the food web, even if it isn’t pretty

  • Text and photos by Shane Gross
  • Wildlife Photos
  • Sep 24, 2025

A NOT PARTICULARLY PHOTOGENIC VARIETY OF TOADFISH, the plainfin midshipman may be the most fascinating fish you’ve never heard of. There’s its name, for starters. Its singing. Its parenting practices. And then there’s a whole body of research underway that might make this the first—but likely not the last—time you encounter this remarkable creature.

The plainfin midshipman—singular and plural—gets its name from the bioluminescent photophores, or light-emitting organs, on its belly that resemble the buttons on a naval officer’s uniform. Found in deep water off the Pacific coast from Alaska to Baja California, Mexico, the fish migrate to the intertidal zone when it’s time to breed, usually around year 2 of their 3- to 17-year life span. There in the shallows, males “sing” to attract females by rapidly contracting muscles around their swim bladders, producing a hum. After females lay eggs, they disappear back out to sea, with a subset of males staying to care for the young.

“This period of male care may be one of the longest and most costly of the fish world,” says Sigal Balshine, a behavioral ecologist from Canada’s McMaster University. For several months, these males, known as guarders, eat little and endure long stretches of low oxygen and high temperatures at low tide. While male parental care is more common in fish than in mammals, where females often shoulder sole duty, or birds, where parents share responsibility, “Studying why it’s the male in fishes that typically provides care for the young helps scientists better understand the evolution of parental care more generally across species,” Balshine says.

With other scientists from McMaster, Balshine is also studying how bald eagles and other birds that feed their chicks a diet rich in plainfin midshipman are transferring contaminants, such as mercury, from the ocean’s depths to the terrestrial world. Learning which contaminants and in what amounts will give researchers more insight into how toxicants spread throughout the food web. Expect more to come from this surprising species. See a slideshow of photos below.


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