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    <title>uwnews.org | RSS news feed: news releases by expert: Ted Pietsch | twp@u.washington.edu |  | University of Washington</title>
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      <title>Flap over fishes: Who's the smallest of them all?</title>
      <description>The authors of a paper in this week's Proceedings of the Royal Society of London Section B, who say their 7.9 mm-long fish from a peat swamp in Southeast Asia is the smallest fish and vertebrate known, have failed to make note of work published last fall that describes sexually mature, male anglerfishes measuring 6.2 mm to 7.4 mm in length.</description>
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      <category>Science</category>
      <author>Sandra Hines (shines@u.washington.edu) </author>
      <guid>http://uwnews.org/article.asp?articleid=22209</guid>
      <pubDate>Fri, 27 Jan 2006 08:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
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      <title>Rare albino ratfish has eerie, silvery sheen</title>
      <description>A ghostly, mutant ratfish caught off Whidbey Island in Washington state is the only completely albino fish ever seen by both the curator of the University of Washington's 7.2 million-specimen fish collection and a fish and wildlife biologist with more than 20 years of sampling fish in Puget Sound.</description>
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      <category>Environment</category>
      <author>Sandra Hines (shines@u.washington.edu) </author>
      <guid>http://uwnews.org/article.asp?articleid=36703</guid>
      <pubDate>Mon, 24 Sep 2007 15:52:48 GMT</pubDate>
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      <title>New fish has a face even Dale Chihuly could love</title>
      <description>A fish that would rather crawl into crevices than swim, and that may be able to see in the same way that humans do, could represent an entirely unknown family of fishes, says a University of Washington fish expert.</description>
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      <author>Sandra Hines (shines@u.washington.edu) </author>
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      <pubDate>Wed, 02 Apr 2008 19:43:45 GMT</pubDate>
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      <title>DNA evidence is in, newly discovered species of fish dubbed H. psychedelica</title>
      <description>"Psychedelica" seems the perfect name for a fish that is a wild swirl of tan and peach zebra stripes and behaves in ways contrary to its brethren, including bouncing like a ball along the seafloor instead of swimming. The fish, which has rare forward-facing eyes like humans, also has a secretive nature. That could be the reason they weren't spotted by divers until just last year nor described in the scientific literature until now.</description>
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      <category>Science</category>
      <author>Sandra Hines (shines@u.washington.edu) </author>
      <guid>http://uwnews.org/article.asp?articleid=47496</guid>
      <pubDate>Tue, 24 Feb 2009 19:00:30 GMT</pubDate>
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