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Marine bioluminescence . Why do so many animals in the open ocean make light?

Publisher
University of Gothenburg. Department of Zoology
University of Reading
Citation
Bioscience Explained. Vol 1 (1)
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/2077/19437
Collections
  • Archive for Bioscience Explained
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Flashlight fish, Anomalops katoptron, filmed at the Stephen Birch Aquarium-Museum (3.747Mb)
The deep sea jellyfish, Atolla wyvillei, seen with lights on and then with lights off. (2.362Mb)
This squid, Abralia veranyi, is doubly amazing because it can actually change the color of its bioluminescence depending on whether it's counterilluminating against sunlight or moonlight. (2.656Mb)
The scaleless blackdragon fish, Melanostomia bartonbeani, seen swimming with lights on and then seen luminescing with lights off. (2.371Mb)
Article (292.5Kb)
Date
2001
Author
Widder, Edith A.
Keywords
Bioluminescence
Abralia veranyi
Atolla wyvillei
Melanostomia bartonbeani
Anomalops katoptron
Publication type
article, other scientific
Language
eng
Metadata
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