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These Glowing Rocks Capture One of Nature's Most Beautiful Phenomena


Batu69

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Looks at first like somebody threw a bunch of glowing beads on some rocks, but what you see here is actually alive.

 

In a series titled “The Weeping Stones,” Tdub Photo, a photo and video company based in Japan, were able to photograph a group of bioluminescent shrimp, which they poured over rocks in the Seto Inland Sea in Okayama, Japan to give the appearance of tears. Bioluminescence is one of our favorite biological tricks in nature, and to see it so beautifully depicted here might make our week.

 

But it wasn’t as simple as finding the shrimp in their natural state, so they needed to get creative.

 

The creatures are known as Vargula hilgendorfii, or more commonly, sea fireflies. They’re about three millimeters long and indigenous to the coasts off southern Japan. They typically live at the bottom of shallow water and come out at night, where Trevor Williams and Jonathan Galione, the duo behind Tdub, were able to fish them out.

 

“They generally live in the sand in shallow water so you often see them being washed up on the shore, but in order to get quantities like we use in our photos you have to fish them out,” the duo wrote on their website.

 

They used preservative jars that had lids with drilled holes, rope, and some raw bacon, and then covered the jars with duct tape (to prevent the jars from breaking when submerged in water). They put the bacon inside the jars and sank them in the water for up to an hour, where the shrimp were attracted to the bacon smell (we would probably end up in the same predicament). Then the contents of the jars were poured out over the rocks, after which one of them took the shots.

 

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The duo wrote that the shrimp only glow for a short amount of time—around 20 to 30 minutes—but that covering them with water will bring the glow back.

You can see more of the duo’s photos on their website, Instagram, and Facebook page.

 

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When I was a kid in boy scouts I was amazed by foxfire, the bioluminescence created by rotting wood in the forests.  It doesn't last long and requires the right conditions to exist, including total darkness to see it, so I was always amazed whenever I came across some.  Fireflies, which were called Lightning Bugs when I was growing up, continue to amaze me with their dancing lights in the summertime in the forests.  People who never get out of the cities and into the forests late at night don't know what beautiful examples of mother nature's work they are missing.

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13 minutes ago, straycat19 said:

When I was a kid in boy scouts I was amazed by foxfire, the bioluminescence created by rotting wood in the forests.  It doesn't last long and requires the right conditions to exist, including total darkness to see it, so I was always amazed whenever I came across some.  Fireflies, which were called Lightning Bugs when I was growing up, continue to amaze me with their dancing lights in the summertime in the forests.  People who never get out of the cities and into the forests late at night don't know what beautiful examples of mother nature's work they are missing.

 

This one more the beautiful of mother nature into the forest at night, boy scouts knew it's.

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Whoopenstein
13 hours ago, straycat19 said:

When I was a kid in boy scouts I was amazed by foxfire, the bioluminescence created by rotting wood in the forests.  It doesn't last long and requires the right conditions to exist, including total darkness to see it, so I was always amazed whenever I came across some.  Fireflies, which were called Lightning Bugs when I was growing up, continue to amaze me with their dancing lights in the summertime in the forests.  People who never get out of the cities and into the forests late at night don't know what beautiful examples of mother nature's work they are missing.

Thank you!!! About 40 years ago, me and some friends made 'shroom tea and walked through the woods in the middle of the night. I found a piece of rotted wood bigger than the size of a football that was glowing bright green. everybody thought it was so cool. Never knew what it was called - but I knew at the time it must have been some kind of fungus. Coincidence? i think not!

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