The clown smile of this creature becomes creepy because it seems to change from the inside out with the passage of time, and the fisherman adds an incredible high-pitched noise. This is not the noise made by living things. )
"If a creature can scream, it will scream like this," fedor Zoff wrote in his post.
Mark Siddhar, director of the invertebrate department of the American Museum of Natural History, said that he couldn't see the smiling expression in the video-the smile we saw may be more related to the lens angle than to the anatomical structure of the creature. [In the photo: ghostly deep-sea creatures]
Laugh or not, the bugs in the video are polychaetes or marine manes; Sidal said that, more precisely, it may belong to the Nereis family. It is not clear what specific species this creature belongs to.
According to the National Museum of History in Los Angeles County, bristle worms are so named because they are surrounded by small bristles called chaetae, which can help them move quickly, dig holes, drill pipes, crawl and swim.
According to a previous field science report, the worm's "head" seems to be actually a retractable pharynx, which sticks out with its lower jaw to grab food. When this pharynx is stuffed into the worm's body, its face looks very smiling, at least in the recent video.
As previously reported in Life Science, polychaetes come in many different sizes and shapes and live in various habitats from hydrothermal vents to coral reefs. Therefore, these smiling and crawling worms are all over the marine habitat. It may be a pity, but they didn't actually laugh.
Frozen deep-sea creatures: Antarctic marine creatures Deep-sea reptiles: the danger of deep acorns 10 The most terrible species of marine life was first published in Life Science magazine.