Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography major - Why is the blue lobster a rare marine "monster"?

Why is the blue lobster a rare marine "monster"?

20 12 In June, a Canadian fisherman caught a rare blue lobster in the Atlantic Ocean. It is said that the probability of blue lobster appearing is one in two million. According to a fisherman aged 5/kloc-0, "I have been engaged in lobster fishing for 33 years. Under normal circumstances, I can salvage 3,000 lobsters every day, and it is the first time to catch blue lobsters. " It is reported that blue lobster is the result of genetic mutation, with a probability of one in two million.

A fisherman in New Zealand caught a strange "shrimp" when he went out to sea. "It feels like scales, tough, like jelly. It looks completely transparent, except for an orange ball in its body. " Experts explained that this creature is called sea squirt and is a marine invertebrate. Their bodies are gelatinous, move in water by absorbing water, and feed on plankton. Its transparent form can protect itself from natural enemies. After all, transparency in water is a good disguise.

Remember the cookie monster in Sesame Street, which is loved by children? It turns out that it has a prototype in the real world! According to the British Daily Mail, a photographer was lucky enough to photograph this marine creature called the melting pot sponge in the Caribbean. Protruding eyes, wide mouth, blue appearance ... This strange creature looks like a biscuit monster, but it doesn't like biscuits, but feeds on plankton.

Local residents found some rare marine life on the coast of Washington State. This creature looks like a jellyfish, but it has green tentacles and retractable limbs at one end. It is reported that this rare creature is gelatinous and translucent, with tentacles and flexible limbs side by side at one end. Local experts also said that this strange marine life was discovered for the first time, and its name is not clear for the time being.