1. Transparent Jellyfish
Jellyfish
are free-swimming members of the phylum Cnidaria. They are found in
every ocean, from the surface to the deep sea. Many jellies are so
transparent that they are almost impossible to see. The one above is
from the Arctapodema genus, with a size of an inch-long
(2.5-centimeter-long). (Photo by
Bill Curtsinger)
2. Transparent Salp
This jellyfish-like animals known as
Salps feed on
small plants
in the water called phytoplankton (marine algae). They are
transparent, barrel-shaped animals that can range from one to 10cm in
length. (Photo by
DM)
3. Transparent Amphipod
Called
Phronima, this unusual animal is one of the many strange species recently found on an expedition to a deep-sea
mountain range in
the North Atlantic.
In an ironic strategy for survival, this tiny shrimplike creature
shows everything it has, inside and out, in an attempt to disappear.
Many other small deep-sea creatures are transparent as well, or nearly
so, to better camouflage themselves in their murky surroundings,
scientists say. (Photo by
David Shale)
.
4. Transparent Zebrafish created by scientists
This see-through zebrafish was created in 2008 by scientists so they can study disease processes, including the spread of
cancer. The transparent fish are allowing researchers at
Children's Hospital
Boston to directly view fish's internal organs and observe processes
such as tumor growth in real-time in living organisms. (Photo by
LS)
5. Transparent Icefish
Fund in the cold waters around Antarctica and southern South America, the
crocodile icefish
(Channichthyidae) feed on krill, copepods, and other fish. Their
blood is transparent because they have no hemoglobin and/or only
defunct erythrocytes. Their metabolism relies only on the oxygen
dissolved in the liquid blood, which is believed to be absorbed directly
through the skin from the water. This works because water can
dissolve the most oxygen when it is coldest. In five species, the gene
for myoglobin in the muscles has also vanished, leaving them with
white instead of
pink hearts. (Photo by
uwe kils)
6. Transparent Larval Shrimp
Found
in the in the waters around Hawaii, this transparent larval shrimp
piggybacks on an equally see-through jellyfish. (Photo by
Chris Newbert/Minden Pictures)
7. Transparent Squid
Found on the southern hemisphere's oceans, the
Glass Squid
(Teuthowenia pellucida) has light organs on its eyes and possesses the
ability to roll into a ball, like an aquatic hedgehog. It is prey of
many deep-sea fish (eg goblin sharks) as well as whales and oceanic
seabirds. (Photo by
Peter Batson) .
8. Transparent Frog
Native to Venezuela, the
Glass Frogs
belong to the amphibian family Centrolenidae (order Anura). While the
general background coloration of most glass frogs is primarily lime
green, the abdominal skin of some members of this family is
transparent, so that the heart, liver, and digestive tract are visible
through their translucent skin. (Photo by
Heidi and Hans-Jurgen Koch)
9. Transparent Butterfly
Found in Central America,
from Mexico to Panama, the
Glasswing Butterfly
(Greta Oto) is a brush-footed butterfly where its wings are
transparent. The tissue between the veins of its wings looks like glass.
(Photo by
Hemmy)
10. Transparent Head Fish
This bizarre deep-water fish called the
Barreleye (Macropinna microstoma) has a transparent head and
tubular
eyes. It has extremely light-sensitive eyes that can rotate within
his transparent, fluid-filled shield on its head, while the fish's
tubular eyes, well inside the head, are capped by
bright green
lenses. The eyes point upward (as shown here) when the fish is
looking for food overhead. They point forward when the fish is
feeding. The two spots above the fish's mouth are not eyes: those are
olfactory organs called nares, which are analogous to human nostrils.
(Photo by
MBARI)
Bonus : All-Transparent-Body Fish
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