yego.me
💡 Stop wasting time. Read Youtube instead of watch. Download Chrome Extension

EXCLUSIVE: How "Glowing" Sharks See Each Other | National Geographic


2m read
·Nov 11, 2024

This amazing thing happened a few years ago. We accidentally found a fluorescent fish, and then that led us to over 200 fluorescent fish, including two species of sharks. I wanted to film these sharks in their natural world with the shark eye camera and see, essentially, what their world looks like through their eye.

Humans see in three colors: red, green, and blue. As soon as we go underwater, we start losing all the other colors quickly, and it becomes dark and blue. These biofluorescent sharks that we're looking at are called swell sharks. These sharks had only one visual pigment, and it was only right at the intersection of blue and green. They're in a blue world where everything is blue, but they're capable of turning blue into green.

Once we learned what the pigment of the shark eye was like, we filtered a very sensitive camera we had, a Red Epic, to have the same color sensitivity as the shark at 120 ft. In this canyon, we were just using the blue ocean light. This was difficult for us humans, but the sharks can still see amazingly well, and that makes sense because they've been down there for 440 million years. They've been living in an environment with very little life.

This was a huge step for us because we didn't even know if the swell sharks, the fluorescent sharks, could see this. With this study, now we know yes, they can see the fluorescence among themselves. This almost seems like when it was discovered that bats were communicating with sound outside of human detection and that there was a whole mode of communication going on. With sharks, it could be something similar—how they're using it.

Now we could even go further and further. We're in this era where we're losing species at a rate that we haven't seen in millions of years. So in trying to connect with nature, it's important to kind of empathize with nature and to even see what these animals are seeing. By putting ourselves behind the shark's eye, it gives us a portal into their life.

More Articles

View All
Ray Dalio & Bill Belichick on Building Great Teams
Okay, well, this looks comfortable. Good! It’s good to have you. Glad you’re comfortable, right? Thank you for writing this book. I can’t tell you how much I enjoy this—this, uh, very educational—and the way that you put your story principles into words i…
Better models, better startups.
Um, this can just basically supercharge that and, you know, have one person do the work of 10. Yeah, we call this episode “Better Models, Better Startups.” I think that is literally true for B2B companies, where it’s like the underlying models—like B2B s…
Subtracting rational expressions: unlike denominators | High School Math | Khan Academy
So right over here we have one rational expression being subtracted from another rational expression. I encourage you to pause the video and see what this would result in, so actually do the subtraction. Alright, now let’s do this together. If we’re subt…
Buying Real Estate for only $100: REITs vs Rental Property
So here’s how you can invest in real estate with as little as $100. Not clickbait, but for real though, this is a way that you can invest in real estate with pretty much whatever money you have saved up right now without doing any of the work yourself. Th…
Shiba Inu Just Broke The Internet
What’s up, Dogecoin? It’s Shiba Inu here, and well, that was fast! Just a week ago, I covered my thoughts about the latest cryptocurrency seemingly overtaking the entire market, cannibalizing everything in its path, and quickly turning some people into mu…
What Blue Holes Have to Say About Climate Change | Years of Living Dangerously
We’re getting everything ready aboard this ship, here the, uh, Alucha research vessel. What we’ve got on board Alusia is we’ve got two subs; both subs are TH000 M rated. We probably, on board the ship, do the most thousand M diving in the world at this mo…