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The video shows black Seadevil fish, which can usually only be found at light depths of the sea and rarely swim near the surface of the sea.

In what the world’s first recorded sighting may be, a black SeaDevil Fishing fish Known to live thousands of foot under the surface of the ocean, where the light is no longer touched – was caught in front of the camera near the surface of the ocean. The film material, which was absorbed on the Spanish Canary Islands, shows the female fish, the Latin name of which translated “Black Monster”, and swims through the light -filled sea water off the coast of Tenerife.

The discovery was made by the NGO -Konderik Tenerife and the Marine Life photographer David Jara Boguñá as they researched sharks. In a joint Instagram post, the organization and Boguñá said that the fish from the abyss had emerged about 1.2 miles off the coast of Tenerife in Spain.

When they got closer, they found that it was a humpback anglerfish, a kind of black Seadevil anglerfish, similar to what was shown in the Disney animation film “Finding Nemo”. The genus in your Latin name for the species, Melanocetus JohnsoniiTranslated into “Black Sea Monster”.

“It could be the first drawn sighting in the world of an adult black devil or abundance of alangment (Melanocetus Johnsonii) on the bright day and on the surface” apparently only larvae or dead adults, and the only live views were recorded via U -boot. “… a legendary fish that only a few people have had the privilege to watch alive,” said the post.

The researchers described the fish as the “true predator of depths”, a characterization that sounds true.

Black Seadevils can live up to 15,000 feet below the surface of the sea, with the hunchbacked fishing fish, according to the researchers, explicitly lives as deep as about 6,500 feet under the sea. Such a depth is known as a Bathypelagic zone or the “midnight zone”, in which animals live in constant darkness and the only light of organic lines.

Female black Seadevils, such as the one that has been documented, are put on prey with a fishing rod structure on the head, which has a tip that shines in the dark. As shown in “Finding Nemo”, prey is put on by the light, and when they come nearby, the fishing fish can eat them.

Female humpback anglers are the more powerful genders of this kind and become far greater than their male counterparts. They can grow 7 inches and take on the iconic look with a large head with pointed teeth and the bioluminescent bait, while according to the Australian museum, men are only about a centimeter long and lack a bait.

The researchers are not sure why this woman found her way in such slightly filled and flat waters. They said it could be due to an illness, an upward or escape from a predator. But what you know is that the observation was “surprising”.

“(ES) did not leave the crew indifferently and will be remembered forever,” they said.

(Tagstotranslate) Oceans (T) Spain

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