In the next century, some of our descendants will be living permanently on the Moon and Mars executing almost similar everyday activities as their relations on Earth do. If you are still in doubt of humans living outside the Earth, always remember that space agencies are already putting in the effort to enable our civilization attain such a milestone before the end of this century. Here's how Lunar Gateway will enable space agencies to achieve moon and mars colonization in this century.
Image Credit: https://pin.it/sD2Nsro
Meet Lampocteis cruentiventer, the bloodybelly comb jelly. This deep sea ctenophore was first collected in the Pacific Ocean off the coast of San Diego, California, in 1979.
Scientists believe the bloody-belly's red belly helps mask bioluminescent light from the prey it consumes. A predator with a glowing gut could easily become prey.
The genus name Lampocteis derives from the Greek roots for “brilliant comb,” referring to the bright iridescence diffracted from the animal’s comb rows.
Love to sea it 🌊
The Höllengebirge at Ischl, 1834, Ferdinand Georg Waldmüller
https://www.wikiart.org/en/ferdinand-georg-waldm-ller/the-h-llengebirge-at-ischl-1834
Gypsy Maidens, 1838, Thomas Sully
Good luck with your exams -Pingu
my life has only known joy since i learned of elysia chlorotica
E X Q U I S I T E
Eastern Emerald Elysia (Elysia chlorotica), family Plakobranchidae, found along the East Coast of the United States
This creature engages in kleptoplasty, taking the chloroplasts from the algae that it eats, and using the chloroplasts for the waste products they create though photosynthesis. Its kind of a... solar powered sea slug!
These sea slugs are not nudibranch, but are in a different order of gastropods.
image via: Views of Elysia chlorotica from Martha’s Vineyard. Figure 15 of Krug et al., 2016, Zootaxa 4148:1
image via: Karen N. Pelletreau et al. http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0097477