Glowing sea shrimp glows on the coast of Japan

A group of photographers recorded the stunning scenery made up of thousands of blue-glowing marine shrimp on the Japanese coast.

A group of photographers recorded the stunning scenery made up of thousands of blue-glowing marine shrimp on the Japanese coast.

Picture 1 of Glowing sea shrimp glows on the coast of Japan

Photographer Trevor Williams and Jonathan Galione took photos of the fluorescent shrimp in a series called "Le Da " in August, according to Mother Nature Network.They took pictures in Okayama, Japan, where there was an abundance of fluorescent shrimp.

Picture 2 of Glowing sea shrimp glows on the coast of Japan

"Luminescent shrimp live in sand in shallow water so you can often catch them drifting ashore. But in order to have large numbers like in the picture, you have to catch them," the two photographers said.They use glass jars to catch shrimp, then dump them on the rocks to glow them while swimming to the sea.

Picture 3 of Glowing sea shrimp glows on the coast of Japan

The scientific name of this bizarre fluorescent shrimp is Vargula Hilgendorfii, but locals used to call them "umihotaru" , meaning sea fireflies in Japanese.

Picture 4 of Glowing sea shrimp glows on the coast of Japan

At night, luminescent shrimp often illuminate the Seto Sea area, the water area between Japan's Honshu, Shikoku and Kyushu islands.

Picture 5 of Glowing sea shrimp glows on the coast of Japan

This crustacean tiny shrimps are only three millimeters long with smooth and transparent circular armor, and a beak-like protruding front.

Picture 6 of Glowing sea shrimp glows on the coast of Japan

Shrimp glows by feeding around the coast every time the tide rises or withdraws.Their food sources are dead fish and insects.

Picture 7 of Glowing sea shrimp glows on the coast of Japan

They glow blue in about 20-30 minutes in response to physical stimulation and can repeat bioluminescence when exposed to seawater.

Picture 8 of Glowing sea shrimp glows on the coast of Japan

According to a study published on the US Biotechnology Information Center website, this marine species luminescence thanks to the reaction between the luciferase enzyme, luciferin protein and oxygen molecules.

Update 16 December 2018
« PREV
NEXT »
Category

Technology

Life

Discover science

Medicine - Health

Event

Entertainment