This footage was captured by a remotely operated vehicle (ROV) in the Indian Ocean at a depth of 3753 feet, not far from a drill wellhead.
The performance of the ROV thrusters catches the attention of alien-like creatures near the end of the movie.
The video was shot off the east coast of Africa and has not been edited.
Undoubtedly, this unknown species is the most hostile living thing on the earth.
Bill Austin, a marine researcher, claims that it is unquestionably a comb jelly (ctenophore).
It was recognized as a lobate Lampocteis ctenophore by George Matsumoto, a ctenophore (comb jelly) specialist at the Monterey Bay Aquarium and Research Institute.
Comb jellies are animals that resemble jellyfish and have cilia that cause them to float in clusters or rows.
Cilia strips can be found running the length of the exterior bodies of some comb jellies.
Comb jellies are typically hunters.
Only comb jellies can spew glue onto their prey while hunting thanks to particularly modified “colloblast” cells.
This footage was captured by a remotely operated vehicle (ROV) in the Indian Ocean at a depth of 3753 feet, not far from a drill wellhead.
The performance of the ROV thrusters catches the attention of alien-like creatures near the end of the movie.
The video was shot off the east coast of Africa and has not been edited.
This enigmatic monster is…
NOTE:
The Indian Ocean
The Indian Ocean, which makes up 19.8% of the water on the surface of the Earth and is the third-largest of the world’s five oceanic regions, has a surface area of 70,560,000 km2 (27,240,000 sq mi).
Its northern, western, and eastern borders are formed by Asia, Africa, and Australia.
Depending on the term being used, it is bordered to the south by either Antarctica or the Southern Ocean.
The Arabian Sea, Laccadive Sea, Somali Sea, Bay of Bengal, and Andaman Sea are only a few of the large marginal or regional seas that the Indian Ocean possesses along its center.