nope even tough i used to live near the coast i would like to tough because on youtube videos where u have only blackness apart from them they look great
Thanks for sharing your thoughts :) Bright waves like the one in the video are pretty rare but fingers crossed that you'll find glowing wavies next to your home too. P.S.: Awesome that you live near the coast!
The quality of production and knowledge represented on this channel is so high tier yet their subscriber count is so low. I hope this channel get more recognition.
its absolutely impressive as to what i've seen. Your visuals on this topic has it even made it more magical.. its like a great science fiction and adventure film. Great work guys, keep pushing.💪🏾
Spreading the beauty of nature and raising awareness for conservation topics is our utmost priority. So it's great to hear that you got inspired by our videos. 😍
Welp, YT put this in my recommendations and all I have to say is, NEW SUBSCRIBER and binge watching! The visuals are amazing right along with the information.. I'm a newbie but thank you for the information!
How tf is this funded? The views are miniscule in comparison to the outstanding quality of these videos, yet I couldn't find a patreon link or anything like that. Are you paid by some countries public service broadcasting program like it exists in Germany or how does your channel work?
I don't have anything to comment But I already know this phenomenon's reason and the same happens in fireflies. But cinematography and narration is awesome.
Thanks, great to hear! :) And yes, you're totally right! There're also bioluminescent organisms on land, like fire flies or fungi, and they're pretty awesome too!
Indian seas are showing bioluminescence behaviour since one week. May be because of reduced ship and boat movement plankton stayed in one place and reached critical concentration... Thanks for the info.... Very informative.
We love them too! If you're into dolphins you should check out our spinner dolphin video: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-zlqD1wYkeG0.html
This is one of those videos to be watched in 720+ ..but unfortunately You Tube still permits upto 480 ( India). Good information guys🔥.. ready for more.😀
Oh boy, 480 isn't that much but thanks for watching it though! And awesome that you're ready for more! 💪🏽 We will upload the next bioluminescence episode in ten days! ;D
today i saw this incident in srilanka, first time. thats why i search about this, its so much beautiful. that is the most beautiful thing that ive ever seen in my life.
This is true, even in India @ karnataka, @ mamgalore , A sub city udupi , there is this Beach called Malpe, there recently on 17th November few group of boys discovered, blue color type mixed in sand which luminescent in beach..this they found at 1.30 am night...this illuminated in blue color, Strange...is nature's ways.
We hope that too! Rising temperatures will definitely affect most of the living ocean creatures but so far nobody knows exactly how their habitat and their habits will change.
Unfortunately, climate change is affecting bioluminescent creatures in the ocean, but not how you might think. It actually seems to be making them more common. Warming waters have caused more algae blooms, contributing to the bioluminescent bacteria and such mentioned in the video. And those aren’t even the only bioluminescent ocean dwellers that have been affected. Pyrosomes (tube shaped colonies of tunicates that can grow to be the size of a whale and can glow blue, white, or pinkish-red) have become far more common to find in the last five years. They used to be rare to find in colder areas. But pyrosomes have been found in new areas in the last couple years, like off the coast of the pacific northwest US, Alaska, and western Canada, despite previously only being found in tropical and temperate waters. This has actually had a pretty big impact on fishermen. There are so many of them in the PNW that some fishermen have reported pulling up nets half filled with colonies of pyrosomes instead of fish. It may also be affecting the balance and population of plankton in those areas, since plankton are their primary food source.
@@terramater Nice... but if u have some profit left after ur productions including salary and all do u donate the money to saving the world? by that, I mean to NGO's who protect a certain species or something
PsychPydh they are motivating people like me who haven’t started their career yet to leave a efficient life and take care of environment and needy society. They could spend left over money in ads so that they can reach more people who might change and do something.
Wow the world is so beautiful even though we still havent discover it all wow the earth could be a wow factor but some people dont care about the earth do they.
@@terramater it also needs your inspiration because when I watched your channel for the first time you have inspired me to become a marine biologist because the worlds ocean is so beautiful and colorful your shot educational videos could change someones lives like me and everyone else to help save the planet. #terramatter #bestchannel ❤❤❤
Currently under sea mining is being discussed. But the scraping of the ocean floor by machines can alter or destroy deep-sea habitats, leading to the loss of species and fragmentation or loss of ecosystem structure. :/
Good question! 🤔 According to Japanese researchers, human bioluminescence in visible light exists - it’s just too dim for our weak eyes to pick up on. The team made this odd discovery using super-sensitive cameras to monitor five healthy male volunteers for 20 minutes every 3 hours inside a light-tight room for three days straight. They found that participants 'glowed' throughout the day, with the brightest spots appearing around the forehead, neck, cheeks in the late afternoon. The dimmest bioluminescence was recorded late at night. Josh Hrala covered the research in an SCIENCE ALERT article.
You can see it on the beach as well, yes! Som people say, that Puerto Mosquito in Puerto Rico does have the brightest and best-known bioluminescent bay in the world.
The water molecules absorb infrared, red and ultraviolet first, and then yellow, green and violet. Blue is absorbed the least, giving it the greatest ocean penetration depth, according to NASA and National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA).