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Expressions of Blobfish | Funny Ugly Fish Meme T-Shirt

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Blobfish belong to the fathead sculpin family, the piscine equivalent of the Addams Family. (Creepy and kooky, mysterious and spooky.) This “altogether ooky” animal is found in the Pacific, Atlantic and Indian oceans at depths between 330 and 9,200 feet. Unlike most fish, they have no swim bladder to help maintain buoyancy. “If Mr. Blobby had an air sac, he would collapse under the extreme pressure,” McGrouther says. “Instead, he uses water as a structural support.” The blobfish’s blancmange of a body is less dense than water, allowing it to drift passively above the seabed. Having realized long ago that activity does them no good, they tend to remain almost, if not entirely, still.

At this depth comparatively, human organs would be crushed under the sheer weight of pressure. 5. The blobfish has no real skeleton, and little muscles. Still, the campaign by the Ugly Animal Preservation Society boosted the popularity of this fish species and got it some scientific attention. The Blobfish campaign of the Ugly Animal Preservation Society | Image via Buzzle It lives in the abyssal or bathyal zones of the ocean, typically at depths of about 2,000 to 4,000 feet (600–1,200 meters) or even deeper.The deep-sea habitat where the blobfish lives is characterized by the absence of light rays, frigid temperatures (often just above freezing), and tremendous pressure. The name Mr. Blobby derived not from the menacing slimeball in the 1958 horror film, but, according to some, the bulbous, pink and yellow polka-dotted bumbler—Britain’s answer to Barney—who once topped the Independent’s list of 10 most irritating television characters. “Personally, I doubt that explanation,” protests McGrouther. “I think it’s called Blobby because, out of the water, it’s a limp, flabby thing that can’t support its own weight. So it splodges.” Over the last two decades, the blobfish has become “a poster pin-up for discovering new things” and “all the stuff down there we still don’t know about”, Parkinson says. The Blobfish (rather than ‘blob fish’) is a deep-sea fish which inhabits waters just above the sea bed at depths of 600 to 1,200 meters (2,000 to 3,900 feet), off the coasts of mainland Australia, New Zealand and Tasmania.

In reality, very little is known about the blobfish and it’s suspected that they are not endangered after all. 7 Dr. Thom Linley from the Newcastle University research team spoke to Fact Animal about their conservation status and added –

Blobfish Fact-File Summary

This predation can prevent certain prey populations from becoming overly abundant and potentially destabilizing the ecosystem. The peculiar blobfish scavenging around the sea floor | Image via American Oceans

The blobfish is a deep sea fish that can be found at depths of up to 8,000 feet. They are known for their unique appearance, as they are often very bloated and have a jelly-like texture. While they are typically silent creatures, they can make a popping noise when they are brought to the surface and their internal pressure causes them to swell and die. How many offspring do blobfish haveOne day while surveying the Tangaroa’s recently departed, expedition photographer and marine ecologist Kerryn Parkinson came upon what Mark McGrouther describes as a “very soft, very goopy fish, about the length of a comic book. While the ship swayed, the jiggly mass slid to and fro, even in death.” Drooping from its lower lip—like the unlit cigarette that forever dangled from Humphrey Bogart’s—was a parasitic copepod. A blob within a blob. For now, Mr Blobby is emblematic of the tantalising mystery of the deep sea, the crucial work of museums, and the importance of conservation for all creatures great, small and disturbingly Trump-like. He’s been on display in the museum to the horror and delight of school kids. The museum even had a rubber replica of Mr Blobby created so they’d have something to poke. Various conservation groups are currently investing efforts in protecting deep-sea species like the blobfish. sunglasses, speech bubbles, and more. Opacity and resizing are supported, and you can copy/paste images He’ll be preserved forever like this,” she says. “He’ll be compared and contrasted with new specimens for years to come. We’ve got fish here from the 1800s – this is why we have museums.”

They also lay their eggs in warmer waters. A blob fish cleaning its eggs | Image via Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute Bila terjaring dan diangkat ke permukaan, dekompresi dapat membuat ikan ini melebar dan kulitnya melentur. We do know more about the blobfish family than we did 20 years ago. Advances in technology mean scientists can now capture video footage of the fish hanging out in the deep, dark depths. The deep-sea paparazzi has revealed that blobfish are ambush predators – lying in wait for a tasty mollusc morsel – and they also lay eggs and guard their nest. New fathead sculpin species have been identified, too, and future deep-sea voyages are likely to uncover more.

Blobfish are unique creatures that live at deep sea levels. They don’t have bones or much muscle mass, but they don’t need them to survive. The high pressure of the depths provides all the support they need. And they don’t need much muscle to move around either. For survival, blobfish basically hang out near the ocean floor and use their mouths to catch their food. Why is a blobfish pink? With its slimy pink skin, bulbous nose and downturned mouth, Mr Blobby is one of the world’s most famous fish. To survive in the nutrient-deficient, high-pressure environment where it lives, the blobfish has developed various adaptations and survival strategies.

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