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In 2023, Julian Obayd, a TikTok user whose videos focus on marine life, went viral after going to the hospital for several Blue Dragon stings. In the viral video, Obayd claimed he had been stung when moving a group of Blue Dragons drying out in the sand and warned viewers about the risk of being stung. [27]
Tiny but mighty, the 1-inch blue dragon feeds on venomous prey including the Portuguese man-o'war and other jellyfish-like species and stores the venom with its fingerlike appendages, according to ...
Spring breakers flocking to TX beaches this month could stumble upon a sight many have never seen — a bright blue and silver sea slug known as the blue dragon.
The "Kenyir monster", or "dragon fish" as the locals call it, was claimed to be responsible for the mysterious drowning of two men on 17 June. [25] In August 2018, India Times reported that arapaima has been spotted in the Chalakudy River, following floods in Kerala; [26] their presence in India is attributed to illegal importation for fish ...
In addition, deep-sea dragon fishes evolved retinas with far-red emitting photophores and rhodopsins. [14] These far-red emitting properties produce long-wave bioluminescence greater than 650 nm. This unique evolutionary trait was first seen around 15.4 Ma and had a single evolutionary origin within the stomiidae family. [14]
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Pteraeolidia ianthina, one of the most common aeolids found, is often called a "blue dragon" by Eastern Australian divers because of its close resemblance to a Chinese dragon. [8] It is one of the most common aeolid nudibranchs found in Eastern Australia and can inflict a painful sting to humans.
Eustomias schmidti, more commonly known as the scaleless dragonfish, is one of the many species included in the family of Stomiidae.Despite its small size, the scaleless dragonfish is a dangerous predator in the deep oceanic waters that uses its self-generated light to attract its prey.