Top 10 Transparent Animals
This
world is full of creatures of all kinds of colours and patterns, and
such conspicuous colours make their beauty inescapable to us. But, some
of them are different. They choose to hide in plain sight. Are they too
shy, or do they just want to be stealthy? Let’s know a little more about
the different types of ghostly, glassy, transparent animals that are
lurking around us.
1. Jellyfish, Salp, Sea Angel, Sea Cucumber, Syphonophora and all things jelly-like
Probably the most common of the transparent animals are the different kinds of jellyfish,
a Cnidarian marine animal. The salp, sea cucumber, sea angel,
Syphonophora, etc., all animals with a gelatinous body, may appear as a
jellyfish in the eyes of a ley man. But, they are all different. Salps
are groups of free-floating transparent tunicates, while transparent sea
cucumbers are echinoderms. Siphonophores like Portuguese Man-O’-War are
hydrozoan, and sea angels are small swimming sea slugs. But, there is
one thing common among all of them: their glassy skin.
2. Glass Frog
This arboreal amphibian has an almost
transparent abdominal skin, which puts on display many of its internal
organs such as the heart, gastrointestinal tract and liver. The dorsal
skin is less transparent, but, it still has a glassy appearance with a
greenish tinge. The inside, too, is almost visible.
3. Barton Spring Salamander
This rare species of salamanders lives
in the fresh water of the Barton Springs in Texas and has no lungs. The
almost translucent skin, which gives it a rather albino appearance,
allows the internal organs, and sometimes, even the previous day’s food
in the stomach, to be viewed from outside.
4. Chaetognatha
These carnivores live in the Polar
region and feed on planktons. The predatory animals are mostly
transparent or translucent. Their bodies are distinctly divided into a
head, tail and trunk. It is dart-like in shape and is covered in
cuticles.
5. Glass Shrimp, Cave Crayfish, Transparent Amphipods
There are several small crustaceans such
as the transparent amphipods or Phronima from North Atlantis, the glass
shrimp from Texas and cave crayfish from Arkansas, that adapt to
transparency as a survival strategy. These amphipods are deep sea
creatures, while the shrimps live in fresh water, and the crayfish live
in caves. These amphipods completely transparent, and some of them can
be quite vicious, such as the Pram Bug that devours its prey, the salp,
from the inside, and hollows its way out. These crayfish and shrimps,
both endangered species, are both pigment-less and white, and almost
transparent, and are often not visible against the water background or
in darkness, especially the shrimps.
6. Glass Squid and Glass Octopus
The glass squid and the glass octopus
are two octopods that people are hardly aware of. They lurk around the
deep waters like ghosts. The glass octopus is quite unusual, with little
knowledge about the creature except the fact that it has keen eyesight.
The glass squid can hide easily from its predators as it appears almost
transparent and has the ability to puff up into a ball. Some of the
glass squids are bioluminescent.
7. Glass-winged Butterfly
These beautiful butterflies often go
unnoticed by the common, careless eyes, had it not been the opaque
outline and veins. Such is the transparency of their wings that the
Spanish call them ‘Espejtos’, which literally means little mirrors. They
display many strange behaviours such as migration over long distances,
or competition among males to entice females.
8. Tortoise and Leaf-mining Beetle
There are many different kinds of turtle
and leaf-mining beetles all with different names. The carapace has a
pattern, and the edges are all transparent, giving the beetle a fancy
look. So, though it is not entirely transparent, but it is one of the
most beautiful ones with a clear shell and vivid patterns. The markings
are all different in case of the different kinds or turtle and
leaf-mining beetles.
9. Fishes
Transparency being a clever defensive
tactics, many a fish, too has adopted this game-plan. The Indian glassy
fish is a still water fish with a transparent body that reveals its
insides, and is the prey of large predators. Humans artificially tinge
its dorsal part for their aquariums. In the Atlantic lurks the ghostly
predator called the crocodile ice fish. Besides the transparent flesh,
it has a transparent blood, too, owing to the lack of haemoglobin. It is
the only vertebrate to have no haemoglobin in blood. A new species of
transparent fish has been found in the Amazon. The Transparent Amazonian
Fish is extremely small, and its body is transparent but beautifully
tinged body, with a brightly blue stomach being visible vividly. A
special fish in this category is the Barrel eye or Spook fish, which has
a completely transparent domelike head. While the rest of the body is
not transparent, it is this transparent head that helps it to look in
all directions at once, with its eyes embedded inside the head. There
are some man-made transparent animals too, like the Japanese transparent
goldfish and Boston’s Zebra fish, both with transparency of skin and
depigmentation of flesh, developed to study internal organs without
dissection.
10. Transparent Snail
This newly discovered snail has a
semi-transparent shell which is beautifully shaped like a dome. These
snails, found in Croatia, are miniscule, and have limited ability to
move. However, they are not completely immobile, and their dispersal
takes place largely through passive transportation via water or larger
mammals.
Special mention should be given to the
animals who adopt transparency in their larval states, such as eels,
squids, shrimps, flounders or blenny fish. The monarch butterfly, in its
pupa stage, has a transparent covering. Some frogs, in their tadpole
state, such as the Costa Rican tadpoles, are transparent. It is
interesting how all the transparent animals try to hide themselves from
the predators, and in the process, mostly end up baring even their
internal organs.
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