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remliqa
National Geographic
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Comments by "remliqa" (@remliqa) on "Scientists' Hilarious Reaction to Bizarre Deep-Sea Fish | National Geographic" video.
@christianboustani8284 Whatever this "stupidity" that you spoke of, I've seen none of it in this video of the original footage. These scientist were in awe of an awesome sight that no one have ever seen before and never been caught on camera (go ahead, google images/videos of gulper been caught doing this type of behaviour) . The fact that they continue to make hypotheses about what creature this was and why it does what it id shows the amount of curiosity inherent in all scientist is still there. Of course they immediately identify it as a gulper eel the moment it reverted to its more familiar state shows that they aren't as clueless as you presume.
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@christianboustani8284 " Then you are truly ignorant. They should have been able to identify it as a Gulper Eel immediately. Gulper Eels are not new, their behaviour has been known for years." It seem the only ignorant person here is you. Did you fail to read the part "an awesome sight that no one have ever seen before and never been caught on camera" ? Though it have been speculated that Gulper eel can do that, there is no proof or sighting of them ever displaying this behaviour (before this footage , that is) ,so no you are completely incorrect in assuming that this is indeed common knowledge that have been "known for years". "If any one of them for a second ever thought "I didn't know a gulper eel could do that", they immediately forfeit their obviously unearned degrees. " No one on the Earth knows for certain that a Gulper eel can an does behaves in such way. "Oh wait, they already forfeited their faulty degrees not even 10 seconds into this video by asking "What is that?" Actually those are proof that they earn those degrees. If first thought of seeing someone that is completely new isn't "What is that ?" , then you don't deserve to be a scientist.
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Huh?
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Yup , they're from The Nautilus (check the you tube channel) .
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No, this isn't an unknown species. They identify this as a type of Gulper eel at the end of the video.
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No light.
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Pretty much most coral do. They form symbiotic relationship with phytoplanton that live within their cells that provide them with food in exchange for protection. That is one of the reason why coral bleaching is dangerous, it strips those phytoplanton from them. It's not the only reason (the water temperature eg) why there is no corral in the deeper parts of the ocean .
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Technically, higher pressure and colder water hold oxygen better than warmer water at the surface so deeper water can hold more oxygen that surface water provided good exchange mechanism is available. The problem is the greater the depth the lesser the amount of sunlight that is available for photosynthesis there fore less way to prlensih the depleted oxygen..
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No self respecting scientist would ever said that. If a scientist ever said "I know everything" , you know you're dealing with a charlatan pretending to be a scientist.
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They did identify the animal at the end of the video, how long does it takes you to properly nae the fish?
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Go watch the video until the end. They did identify it once it deflates itself.
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Unlike that fisherman these scientists did identify the creature at the end of this video.
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Umm... This footage was taken from the Nautilus's youtube channel.
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You should go to the Nautilus own youtube channel.
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Nope.
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You speak about yourself that way.
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Not really, pretty all image of Gulper eel are that when they're deflated.
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Wath until the end of the video., HINT: they did identify the fish. You must understand that this is the first time ever that Gulper ell was filmed doing this behaviour , most specimen of Gulper eel were dead or dying when the scientist got to them so they know very little about them and their behaviour while still alive.
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