In the open ocean, there’s nowhere to hide. There are no rocks to slip under, no kelp to duck behind—nothing but clear water all around. “Every direction you look looks pretty much the same—it’s this ridiculous unearthly blue,” says Sönke Johnsen, a marine biologist and professor at Duke University. If you went swimming out here in the clear blue, you’d stick out like a billboard. Everything with eyes could see you coming. Being visible isn’t safe for creatures that live here; it’s too easy to be spotted by both potential prey and potential predators. So many of them have adopted a remarkable form of camouflage: they’re transparent.
I See Right Through You
Transparent animals let light pass through their bodies the same way it passes through a window. An amazing variety of open-ocean animals can do this: bowl-shaped jellyfish, comb jellies as long as a person, small shrimp-like arthropods, big-eyed squid, tiny larval fish, and snails that look like Christmas ornaments.
These animals typically live between the surface of the ocean and a depth of about 3,300 feet (1,000 m)— as far as most light can reach. Most of them are extremely delicate and can be damaged by a simple touch. Johnsen says these animals drift through life alone: “They never touch anything unless they’re eating it, or unless something is eating them.”
And they are as clear as glass. How does an animal become see-through? It’s trickier than you might think.
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