In what can be the first in the world recorded sight, black sids- fishing It is known for living thousands of feet under the surface of the ocean, where the light no longer affects – was caught on the swimming class to the surface of the ocean. The footage captured in the Canary Islands of Spain shows female fish, the name of which Latin translates into the “Black Sea Monster” floating across the light ocean waters off the Tenneri coast.
The opening was made by NGO Condrick Tenerife and the photographer of Maritime Life, David Yara Bogunya when they examined the sharks. In A A joint post on InstagramThe organization and Bohunya said the fish came out of the abyss approximately 1.2 miles from the Tenneri coast in Spain.
Once they were approaching, they realized that it was fishing fish, a type of black fish seadevil, similar to what was painted in the animation film Disney “Search Nem”. A genus in its Latin name for the species, Melanocetus JohnsoniiIt is translated into a “black monster”.
“It can be the first recorded sight in the world of an adult black devil or a brown seeming only the larvae or dead adults, and the only views were recorded through the submarine.” … the legendary fish that few would be privileged to watch the privilege alive, ”the message reads.
The researchers described the fish as “a true depth predator”, the characteristics that ring.
According to the researchers, black forces can live up to 15,000 feet under the surface of the ocean, and fisherman's tea, specially known, lives as deep as approximately 6,500 feet under the sea, researchers report. Such depth is known as the bio -zone or “The northern zone“Where animals live in constant darkness, and the only light comes from biolyuminescence.
Women's black sets, such as the one that was recorded, will attract prey with a fishing structure similar to the head that has a tip that lights up in the dark. As shown in the “search”, the mining is attracted to the light, and when they approach, fishing can eat them.
Women's tea fishing is a more powerful of sex in this species that grow much larger than their men's colleagues. They can grow up to 7 inches and take on a more iconic look with a big head with pointed teeth and bioluminescent bait, while males become just approximately in inch and have no bait, according to Australian Museum.
Researchers are not sure why this woman has found her way in such light and small waters. They said it could be associated with illness, lifting or perhaps running away from the predator. But what they know is what the observation was “strange”.
“(This) did not leave the crew indifferent and be remembered forever,” they said.