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Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ

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Playing Changes
Simply brilliant!
There are no words that can express how much i love black cats.
This clip is so good
Canada lynx up north is so impressive with how far they can jump with no momentum and we have Lynx rufus down here that can apparently climb cliffs( never have seen it but would like to)
Test post
It’s World Octopus Day! ❤️❤️❤️
Behold, a common octopus for the people—the same species teaching classes on Netflix these days.
Octopus vulgaris—meaning “common octopus,” not due to a cephalopoddy mouth—is found throughout the Atlantic and Mediterranean. Their lairs can be spotted by piles of leftover shells scattered about the entrance—the famed octopus’s garden! Octo-ber 8th kicks off Cephalopod Awareness Days, a time to sea-lebrate these marvelous face-footed mollusks. Let’s cephaloparty!
It’s a tuna! It’s a baby whale! No, it’s… AN OCEAN SUNFISH!! We’re excited to welcome a Mola mola back to our Open Sea Exhibit!
This young mola comes to us from Carmel Bay. It’s 3-4 years old and weighs about 34kg/75lbs. We’re the only aquarium in North America to exhibit these sensitive animals, thanks to our proximity to their habitat.
Sunfish are temporary guests at the Aquarium. Our dedicated sunfish aquarists train them to swim over to us to be hand-fed a specialized “mola sausage” that mimics their wild meals of jellies, shrimp and other invertebrates.
Once they grow to be around 230kg/500 pounds, or if their behavior changes letting us know they’re ready to go, we release them back to the wild with tags allowing us to find out how large they’ve grown should someone come across them again.
Mighty molas are often seen in Monterey Bay from whale watching boats, especially when jellies are close to the coast, and beachgoers commonly find carcasses of young ones washed up on the beach, usually after a sea lion had some mola munchies.
Ocean sunfish are found in temperate seas around the world and two separate species can be found in Monterey Bay: The common sunfish Mola mola and the recently discovered Hoodwinker sunfish, Mola tecta.
In fact, y’all here on Tumblr helped us find the first ever living, confirmed Mola tecta in Monterey Bay last year!
Famous for being the heaviest bony fishes in the ocean, multiple Mola species reach 2,300kg/5,000lbs, and the title goes back and forth between the bumphead sunfish M. alexandrini and M. mola as new leviathans are discovered.)
We’re never quite sure how long a sunfish will stay with us. For now, enjoy these moments of mola magic on the Open Sea Live Cam! Welcome to the Aquarium young mola! Woo!!
This weekend blue our minds! Bioluminescent waves filled with light-producing plankton ignited the surfline through the night all around the Monterey Bay!
The light is produced by a type of plant-plankton known as dinoflagellates (the specific species involved in this bloom are being identified.)
Bioluminescence is relatively rare on land—fireflies or glow-in-the-dark mushrooms are some common examples—but it’s a staple in the ocean. Our colleagues at the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute found that over 75% of species they’ve found in the deep sea in our backyard bioluminesce.
Bioluminescence has many purposes: Anglerfish use it to attract food in their lure, strawberry squid use it to disguise themselves—and many organisms, from worms and shrimp to jellies and dinoflagellates, use it as a defense mechanism!
When a dinoflagellate is shaken up, a light-emitting chemical reaction inside the plankter produces a blue flash that startles a would-be predator, limiting their effectiveness—imagine a strobe light going off with every bite of a sandwich!
On their own, each dinoflagellate is just one sparkle in the night. But when there is a big bloom of them—sometimes called “red tides”, though they’re not always red and have little to do with the tides—their collective trillions agitated in the waves produce the aquatic fireworks we’ve been experiencing recently.
When they’re this abundant, the dinoflagellates are able to create somewhat of a burglar alarm with their individual defensive spark. Animals swimming through the soup leave a trail of light breadcrumbs for larger predators to track through living night-vision seas.
Besides their beauty, some dinoflagellate blooms can be noxious to marine life and to people. Lingulodinium polyedra is able to produce toxins that accumulate in shellfish and affect their predators, and other dinoflagellates can produce soap-like substances that can harm seabirds and irritate humans that come in contact with them.
We’re not sure how long the waves will be luminescent—wind and waves and currents could soon dissipate the bloom, returning the beaches to their regular slumber. If you’re looking to see the luminescence, be advised! We’re still in a global pandemic: Respect beach closures, keep your distance from other groups and wear your mask.
The luminescent waves won’t look as blue as you see in the photos and in videos—as your eyes adjust to the dark, you’ll lose your color vision, so the waves will mostly look bright white. The darker the coast, the more pronounced the luminescence. For camera settings, keep it steady on a tripod, and take a longer exposure: 3 to 30 seconds, and you’ll see the blue!
Thanks everyone for reading this far—and thanks most of all to the dinoflagellates for putting on such a show! You blue us away!
“Commander Vimes didn’t like the phrase ‘The innocent have nothing to fear’, believing the innocent had everything to fear, mostly from the guilty but in the longer term even more from those who say things like ‘The innocent have nothing to fear’.”
–Terry Pratchett, Snuff
Fun fact: the reason wearing seatbelts became common in the US was because kids were trained to in school, and would constantly bug their parents to wear their own seatbelts. In my mom’s words, everyone was shamed by little children into behaving safely.
This is how I got my mom to quit smoking,,, by annoying the everloving shit oughta her at age 7
My 8 year old looked at a man in the airport (when I had to fly her to her Dad’s for the summer) and the sass came out in 3 ways.
First: She would constantly ask why someone wasn’t wearing a mask, loudly. “It’s not like it’s hard.”
Second: Standing in line to get food she noticed ome guy behind us wasn’t adhering to the 6 feet guidelines. She turned to him. “Six feet please.” He was so surprised he stepped back automatically. But then glared at me as I shrugged. “Rules are rules dude. She did say please.”
Third: A woman sneezed on the other side of the terminal waiting area. She was joined by a couple other kids for this one. “If you cough or sneeze, use your elbow please.” Honestly half of us were trembling to keep in the laughter and the others were just shocked to hear kids speak up like that.
“A library is a good place to go when you feel unhappy, for there, in a book, you may find encouragement and comfort. A library is a good place to go when you feel bewildered or undecided, for there, in a book, you may have your question answered. Books are good company, in sad times and happy times, for books are people – people who have managed to stay alive by hiding between the covers of a book.”
— E.B. White (b. 11 July 1899)
笠松紫浪 Shiro Kasamatsu ( 1889-1991 )
@Facebook is blocking all reposts of this article by The @Guardian. It also prevents people from saving it. . Facebook shows us, once again, that it is more afraid of nudity, or the semblance of it, than of spreading lies, violence and hatred. And Zuckerberg still dares to pretend it's all in the name of freedom of speech or something... . . #angry https://www.instagram.com/p/CBakASoAuXa/?igshid=zjb60jqoysa
Black cat and dragonflies, by Tadashige Nishida (2000).
Happy New Year, my furiends! May 2019 be full of love and happiness! / Une excellente nouvelle année, les chamis! Que 2019 soit rempli d'amour et de bonheur! 💖🐱🍾🥂💖 . #hermionnethecat #olafthegnome #friends #beautiful #blackcat #mon #adorable #chatnoir #blackcatsofinstagram #instacat #catstagram #happynewyear #welcome #2019 #bonneanne #meilleurs #voeux https://www.instagram.com/p/BsGAAIzAO90/?utm_source=ig_tumblr_share&igshid=o1jhg5vmn31r
Joyous Noël ! Merry Christmas ! 💖🎄🎅🦌🌟 https://www.instagram.com/p/Br034EUHfTM/?utm_source=ig_tumblr_share&igshid=z4e88gjf7ay5