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Shining Examples: 10 Bioluminescent Creatures that Glow in Surprising Ways [Slide Show]

A wide range of organisms generate their own light to seek mates, sustenance and survival--inspiring researchers and moviemakers alike

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FLYING WITH FIRE
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FLYING WITH FIRE

The power to make its own light distinguishes the life—and death—of the familiar firefly. Also commonly called lightning bugs, these species have developed unique call-and-response patterns of flashes between courting, airborne males and the females that watch from leafy perches....[More]

KILLUMINATION
thumb: KILLUMINATION

KILLUMINATION

Hundreds of meters down in deep, pitch-black ocean waters, monstrous-looking anglerfish wave about bioluminescent lures, called esca , to temp prey into swimming within striking distance....[More]

BOMBS AWAY!
thumb: BOMBS AWAY!

BOMBS AWAY!

A paper published in Science this August made waves when it announced the discovery of five previously unknown species of sea worm that launch liquid-filled, bioluminescent capsules that burst into green light for several seconds....[More]

GELATINOUS GLOW
thumb: GELATINOUS GLOW

GELATINOUS GLOW

Comb jellies, technically known as ctenophores, are a phylum of seafaring organism characterized by their use of small hairs, or cilia, for aquatic locomotion....[More]

EFFULGENT FUNGI
thumb: EFFULGENT FUNGI

EFFULGENT FUNGI

Mushrooms gleam in forests all over the world, from the Mycena lucentipes species seen here, described in Brazil last year, to the honey and jack o' lantern mushrooms that emit a greenish "fox fire" glow in woodlands....[More]

BLUE TIDE
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BLUE TIDE

When plankton called dinoflagellates grow too numerous near shore, the single-celled algae can stain the water a reddish-brown, causing so-called red tides that are often toxic to people and fish alike....[More]

FLY FISHING--WITH A FLASHLIGHT
thumb: FLY FISHING--WITH A FLASHLIGHT

FLY FISHING--WITH A FLASHLIGHT

Before a short adult life as a gnat, larvae in the genus Arachnocampa spend months as carnivorous glowworms in caves or sheltered areas using light as a lure....[More]

PHOTONIC CAMOUFLAGE
thumb: PHOTONIC CAMOUFLAGE

PHOTONIC CAMOUFLAGE

Even in ocean depths where sunlight barely penetrates, the faint silhouette that a fish throws to predators beneath it in the water column can make it an easy target....[More]

SPARKLING SLIME
thumb: SPARKLING SLIME

SPARKLING SLIME

Dozens of earthworm species from all over the world can secrete a glowing slime, thought to startle predators. This particular worm, Diplocardia longa , is found in sandy soils in southern Georgia in the U.S....[More]

UNDERWATER
thumb: UNDERWATER

UNDERWATER "NIGHT VISION"

Most oceanic creatures bioluminesce in blue—and to a lesser extent green—because these short wavelengths of light travel farther in water than longer, redder wavelengths....[More]

BONUS: LUMINOUS BEINGS ARE WE?
thumb: BONUS: LUMINOUS BEINGS ARE WE?

BONUS: LUMINOUS BEINGS ARE WE?

No mammals have been shown to produce bioluminescence—at least in an intended, substrate-and-enzyme-based visual display like fireflies and many denizens of the deep—and humans are no exception....[More]

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5 Comments

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  1. 1. 3812 10:15 PM 12/19/09

    Humans are BL in IR.

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  2. 2. 3812 10:17 PM 12/19/09

    Humans are bioluminescent in IR.

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  3. 3. 3812 in reply to 3812 10:28 PM 12/19/09

    I was hoping to see Boxcar Bugs.

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  4. 4. psaltseller 02:17 AM 12/20/09

    Unfair!! I have to trek all the way to the East Coast to see fireflies. People sell butterflies and beetles. Why does no-one provide fireflies to lonely westerners??

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  5. 5. Yeti in reply to 3812 03:06 PM 12/20/09

    Humans are incandescent in IR, not luminescent. However, there is ultraweak biophoton emission even in the visible spectrum, though most scientists distinguish this from bioluminescence.

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