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Deep Sea Creatures - Top 10 Most Amazing Sea Creatures Ever Discovered!
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The deep sea is the lowest layer of the ocean, at a depth of 1800m or more. Little or no light penetrates so deep; it was therefore thought historically that no Deep Sea Creatures would be found there. But on the contrary, Deep Sea Creatures thrives in the deep sea. Almost miraculously, we are finding interesting, bizarre, never-before-seen life on every dive – so here are Top ten recently discovered deep sea creatures.
some of the strangest and most terrifying creatures in the universe lie beneath the surface of the waves on our very own planet. INCREDIBLE DEEP SEA FISH AND CREATURES lie In the pitch black depths of the ocean where the pressure can be dozens of times higher than at sea level you may very well find yourself running into one of these creatures of the deep.
These deep sea creatures remain so mysterious that some scientists belief that studying this rare species may help in developing new treatments of many diseases by bringing us to new understandings of cell biology.
10. Jelly Fish (0:10)
Jellyfish are not actually fish, they are invertebrates. Jellyfish don’t have brains, they have nerve nets which sense changes in the environment and co-ordinate the responses. Jellyfish can clone themselves.
9. Mantis Shrimp (0:33)
Mantis shrimps have the most complex eyes in the animal kingdom that can see ultraviolet and polarized light. Attack of mantis shrimp happens extremely quickly, with a velocity of 10 meters per second which is 50 times faster than a human blinking eye.
8. Sea dragon (1:00)
The lobes of the skin that grow on the leafy Seadragon provide camouflage, giving it the appearance of a sea weed. It is able to maintain the illusion when swimming, appearing to move through the water like a piece of floating sea weed, It can also change colour to blend in.
7. Giant pacific Octopus (1:27)
Their arm spans can be up to an incredible 20 feet across- about the height of a Two- story building. They have three hearts, two are used to pump blood to the gills, and one is used to pump blood to the rest of the body.
6. Nautilus (1:51)
Nautiluses are living fossils. Nautiluses inhabited the earth 265 million years before dinosaurs appeared. Their shell is divided in chambers. Adult Nautilus usually has more than 30 chambers.
5. Comb Jelly Fish (2:19)
Comb jellies can make their own light which is called bioluminescence. Eight rows of the tiny comb like plates that they beat to move themselves through the water, as they swim, the comb rows diffract light to produce a shimmering, rainbow effect.
4. Stingray (2:44)
They use spine and venom to protect against predators. Stingrays can kill a lot of different animals, including humans. Their eyes are located on the top of the head, but they don’t use eyes to find their prey. Stingrays have electro sensors which help them detect electrical charges that the prey emits.
3. Puffer fish (3:12)
To scare predators, pufferfish ingests huge amount of water which increases their body size and turn them into odd looking ball like creatures. One puffer fish contains enough toxin to kill 30 adult men. Almost all species of puffer fish contain toxin called tetrodotoxin that can be 1200 times stronger than cyanide.
2. Sarcastic Fringehead (3:50)
Sarcastic fringehead are named after their extremely temperamental and aggressive territorial behaviour. These fiercely territorial sarcastic fringeheads will fight intruders by opening their jaws and pressing their enormous mouths together to wrestle.
1. Pyrosome (4:16)
Pyrosome is formed of hundreds or thousands of individuals called zooids, which are clones of the first founding zooid. These zooids are like tiny saps, just a few, millimetres long.
Research and Sources :
Jelly Fish (0:10)
Mantis Shrimp (0:33)
Sea dragon (1:00)
Giant pacific Octopus (1:27)
Nautilus or arganaut (1:51)
Comb Jelly Fish (2:19)
Stingray (2:44)
Puffer fish (3:12)
Sarcastic Fringehead (3:50)
Pyrosome (4:16)
some of the strangest and most terrifying creatures in the universe lie beneath the surface of the waves on our very own planet. INCREDIBLE DEEP SEA FISH AND CREATURES lie In the pitch black depths of the ocean where the pressure can be dozens of times higher than at sea level you may very well find yourself running into one of these creatures of the deep.
These deep sea creatures remain so mysterious that some scientists belief that studying this rare species may help in developing new treatments of many diseases by bringing us to new understandings of cell biology.
10. Jelly Fish (0:10)
Jellyfish are not actually fish, they are invertebrates. Jellyfish don’t have brains, they have nerve nets which sense changes in the environment and co-ordinate the responses. Jellyfish can clone themselves.
9. Mantis Shrimp (0:33)
Mantis shrimps have the most complex eyes in the animal kingdom that can see ultraviolet and polarized light. Attack of mantis shrimp happens extremely quickly, with a velocity of 10 meters per second which is 50 times faster than a human blinking eye.
8. Sea dragon (1:00)
The lobes of the skin that grow on the leafy Seadragon provide camouflage, giving it the appearance of a sea weed. It is able to maintain the illusion when swimming, appearing to move through the water like a piece of floating sea weed, It can also change colour to blend in.
7. Giant pacific Octopus (1:27)
Their arm spans can be up to an incredible 20 feet across- about the height of a Two- story building. They have three hearts, two are used to pump blood to the gills, and one is used to pump blood to the rest of the body.
6. Nautilus (1:51)
Nautiluses are living fossils. Nautiluses inhabited the earth 265 million years before dinosaurs appeared. Their shell is divided in chambers. Adult Nautilus usually has more than 30 chambers.
5. Comb Jelly Fish (2:19)
Comb jellies can make their own light which is called bioluminescence. Eight rows of the tiny comb like plates that they beat to move themselves through the water, as they swim, the comb rows diffract light to produce a shimmering, rainbow effect.
4. Stingray (2:44)
They use spine and venom to protect against predators. Stingrays can kill a lot of different animals, including humans. Their eyes are located on the top of the head, but they don’t use eyes to find their prey. Stingrays have electro sensors which help them detect electrical charges that the prey emits.
3. Puffer fish (3:12)
To scare predators, pufferfish ingests huge amount of water which increases their body size and turn them into odd looking ball like creatures. One puffer fish contains enough toxin to kill 30 adult men. Almost all species of puffer fish contain toxin called tetrodotoxin that can be 1200 times stronger than cyanide.
2. Sarcastic Fringehead (3:50)
Sarcastic fringehead are named after their extremely temperamental and aggressive territorial behaviour. These fiercely territorial sarcastic fringeheads will fight intruders by opening their jaws and pressing their enormous mouths together to wrestle.
1. Pyrosome (4:16)
Pyrosome is formed of hundreds or thousands of individuals called zooids, which are clones of the first founding zooid. These zooids are like tiny saps, just a few, millimetres long.
Research and Sources :
Jelly Fish (0:10)
Mantis Shrimp (0:33)
Sea dragon (1:00)
Giant pacific Octopus (1:27)
Nautilus or arganaut (1:51)
Comb Jelly Fish (2:19)
Stingray (2:44)
Puffer fish (3:12)
Sarcastic Fringehead (3:50)
Pyrosome (4:16)
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