Gnathophausia ingens, the giant red mysid, is a species of lophogastridcrustacean with a pantropical distribution.[2] The adults may reach 35 cm (14 in) long, including the rostrum.[2] Females may brood their young for up to 530 days.[3] Brooding females live between 900 and 1,400 m (3,000–4,600 ft) in the eastern Pacific Ocean off California. They do not feed during this time.[4] When they feed, they prey on smaller crustaceans.[5]
^ abLinda Haithcock Pequegnat (1965). "The bathypelagic mysid Gnathophausia (Crustacea) and its distribution in the eastern Pacific Ocean". Pacific Science. 19 (4): 399–421. hdl:10125/7299.
^J. J. Childress & M. H. Price (1978). "Growth rate of the bathypelagic crustacean Gnathophausia ingens (Mysidacea: Lophogastridae). I. Dimensional growth and population structure". Marine Biology. 50 (1): 47–62. doi:10.1007/BF00390541.
^J. J. Childress & M. H. Price (1983). "Growth rate of the bathypelagic crustacean Gnathophausia ingens (Mysidacea: Lophogastridae) II. Accumulation of material and energy". Marine Biology. 76 (2): 165–177. doi:10.1007/BF00392733.