English edit

Etymology edit

shark +‎ sucker

Noun edit

sharksucker (plural sharksuckers)

  1. The remora or suckerfish.
    • 1972, Earl Stannard Herald, Fishes of North America, page 155:
      Shark fishermen sometimes receive an unexpected bonus in the form of small fishes known as remoras, or sharksuckers, which are attached to the sharks by a sucking disk located on the top of the head.
    • 2007, Mike Lane, Angler's Guide to Fishes of the Gulf of Mexico[1], page 191:
      The sharksucker may be found free swimming but is most often found hitchhiking on a larger fish by attaching itself to the fish with the sucker disk on top of its head.
    • 2012, Noble S. Proctor, A Field Guide to the Southeast Coast & Gulf of Mexico[2]:
      Remoras and sharksuckers directly attach themselves to large sharks, Manta Rays, and large bony fish, feeding on scraps of their hosts' dinners and taking smaller fish not eaten by the host.

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