


I mean geez, holy crap, these things make sharks look like harmless utility maximizers no worse than the Koch bothers!
yrs,
rubato



No.wesw wrote:I believe those are all deep water fish








In fact from BSG's post we can see that all the fish you posted pictures of are in fact deep ocean dwellers except for one that lives in rivers and lakes in Africa...rubato wrote:No.wesw wrote:I believe those are all deep water fish
yrs,
rubato
Would be what we call "wrong"...this one was local! Right here!




In our immediate locality. Right here. Our ocean backyard.The deepest reaches of the ocean contain some of earth's most incredible creatures. They're also some of the most bizarre.
On Nov. 17, Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute Senior Scientist Bruce Robison and his team filmed an elusive "black seadevil" anglerfish 1,900 feet deep in the Monterey Canyon. To appreciate the magnitude of their find, it helps to know that anglerfish have been filmed only half a dozen times — ever.
"This is the first time we've captured this fish on video in its habitat," Robinson said. "Anglerfish, like this Melanocetus, are among the most rarely seen of all deep-sea fishes."
And a nightmare-inducing vision they are. Females, like the one seen here, have a "fishing pole" on their heads that lures in prey with a light on the tip. They have tiny eyes and can't see well in the pitch black of Monterey Canyon so they rely more on feelers on their bodies to sense their environment. Anglerfish can also swallow prey larger than themselves because their stomaches are highly flexible murder balloons.
Before you suggest setting Monterey Bay on fire, keep in mind that this anglerfish is only about nine centimeters long (whew).
Harmless, its prey includes crustaceans and small fish, the largest are only a few inches long.rubato wrote:
And this one was local! Right here! It's one thing when it's off in some exotic tropical reef.

Daft comparison, these things are no threat to humans, sharks are.rubato wrote:I mean geez, holy crap, these things make sharks look like harmless utility maximizers no worse than the Koch bothers!
yrs,
rubato

MBARI featured image
Flapjack octopus
This flapjack octopus in the genus Opisthoteuthis was photographed 330 meters (about 1,080 feet) below the surface in Monterey Bay. Flapjack octopus can swim by moving their fins, pulsing their webbed arms, pushing water through their funnel for jet propulsion, or all three at once. They often swim up off the bottom and hover a bit just above the seafloor, looking for small crustaceans, worms, and other food. MBARI researchers are working with aquarists at the Monterey Bay Aquarium to learn more about flapjack octopuses.
First rule when you find yourself in a hole . . . blame it on Republicans (this is a Rubato thread after all).OK - here's something else that would change how I feel about swimming in the ocean (aside from not wanting to inflict my own carcass on the vision of others):
Looks like a novelty condom.rubato wrote: