Deepwater anglers recently discovered in shallow waters have recently captured the hearts of hundreds of thousands of social media users. And the photographer who found it recently opened up about the fate of a creature.
David Jara Bognia, a Marine Corps photographer from Spanish conservation group Condric Tenerife, posted a video on February 13th about the virus angler. The island was first introduced this month.
However, the acous photos did not capture the true size of the fish, Jara said – the deep sea creatures were about two inches long.
“To start with size… The small fish were measured below 6 centimeters,” he recalled. “She was more like a black fritter than a black monster.”
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Deep-sea fishing fish was recently discovered in shallow waters. (David Jara Boguna/Condrik Tenerife via Storyful)
“You often asked me about this, but she never attacked us,” Jara added. “I was more confused [by its presence] Above all. ”
“The second most important thing I want to clarify is that it was a woman because the man was less than two or three centimeters long,” Jala continues, not having male fishing or bioluminescent antennas. I added.
Marine experts also discussed why fish that were inhabited by fish 6,000 feet below sea level were brought to the surface in the first place.
“There were a lot of hypotheses about that,” Jara admitted. “But the main thing is that the animals are sick, the animals were either cleaned upstream or escaped from a kind of predator.”
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The fish died shortly after being recorded on video. (David Jara Boguna/Condrik Tenerife via Storyful)
The photographer also said that predatory anglers “may have ingested fish and the gas may rise to the surface upon digestion.”
In response to the millions of reactions the video induced, Jala said she found the commenter's reference to climate change as “above,” and dismissed fears that the fish were a precursor to an imminent apocalypse.
Jala also confirmed that the fish died shortly after it was recorded.
“Unfortunately, as many people know, [anglerfish] He died and his body was donated to the Tenerifay Museum and Archaeology,” he pointed out.
Expert clarification came when millions of social media users were shedding tears at the fate of the fish. Initially considered a “nightmare fuel,” anglers inspired fan art and poetry as humans tried to imagine what a journey from the deep sea would be like.
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“I can't speak now. Crying a fish,” one Tiktok user wrote in a video that has been viewed millions.

Fish influenced countless poems on social media, as many mourn their deaths. (David Jara Boguna/Condrik Tenerife via Storyful)
“There is something deeply poetic about finding light after a life of darkness,” observed another user.
“All I've ever done is cry on this damn app,” another wrote.
“Someone said she was blind and couldn't see the light, but she probably knew by feeling the temperature change in the water,” the fourth viewer said. “I cried hard.”
1.6 million likes! In another Tiktok video of a fish with a , one user wrote that she was personally inspired by the creature's journey.
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“For her and her will, I am willing to find the light I enrolled in the school to get my degree,” a Tiktok user wrote. “I will find my light like her.”

Some social media users were more inspired by fish stories than others. (David Jara Boguna/Condrik Tenerife via Storyful)
Other social media users were not inspired by the video or the emotional responses it elicited.
“I like to think she's on a journey…but my biology background tells me that she was dying and controlled her buoyancy.” The commenter writes.
“This is not a Pixar movie,” another said. “She was dying. Stop making it romantic.”
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Fish that live deep in the ocean are rarely seen in the shallow oceans where they live. Last year, the dead Fishing fish It was washed away on Oregon beaches for the first time in recorded history.





