Animals

Glow-in-the-dark SHARKS found lurking hundreds of feet below sea near New Zealand

THREE new species of sharks have been found off the coast of New Zealand and they all glow in the dark.

The amazing creatures were discovered by researchers hundreds of feet below the surface of an oceanic area called the Chatham rise.3These images show the luminescent patterns the kitefin sharkCredit: Jérôme Mallefet, Darren W. Stevens and Laurent Duchatelet

The sharks are called the kitefin shark, the blackbelly lanternshark and the southern lanternshark.

Their scientific names are Dalatias lichaEtmopterus lucifer and Etmopterus granulosus.

Scientists actually found them back in January 2020 but they’ve just published a study that particularly focuses on the kitefin shark.

That’s because the kitefin shark has been awarded the title of the largest known underwater creature that glows in the dark.

Kitefin sharks are said to swim 300 meters (984 feet) below sea level.

That’s probably why it’s taken so long to discover them.

They eat other sharks, fish and crustaceans.

Kitefins can grow to almost six feet, that’s around the average size of a human man.

Researchers now refer to it as a “giant luminous shark” but it’s nowhere near as big as a great white shark, which can grow to over 20 feet.

3The luminescent patterns of the kitefin shark (A) have been compared to the blackbelly lanternshark (D) and the southern lanternshark (E)Credit: Jérôme Mallefet, Darren W. Stevens and Laurent Duchatelet

The study was conducted by marine biologists from Belgium and New Zealand.

It’s been published in the Frontiers in Marine Science journal.

The researchers wrote: “Bioluminescence has often been seen as a spectacular yet uncommon event at sea but considering the vastness of the deep sea and the occurrence of luminous organisms in this zone, it is now more and more obvious that producing light at depth must play an important role structuring the biggest ecosystem on our planet.”

All three sharks were found in a region of the sea called the “twilight zone”.

This is an area around 200 and 1000 meters down (656 – 3,200 feet) below the surface that sunlight does not reach.

It’s thought the sharks use their glow to attract or hide from prey at these depths and may even use it to confuse potential predators.

However, the kitefins are so large they don’t have many predators.

Researchers will continue to study them to find out exactly why they glow.

They wrote: “Studying light emission of the kitefin shark, the blackbelly lanternshark, and the southern lanternshark, might increase our understanding of their bioluminescence functions, and possible prey-predation relationships between these species.”

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