Cyclops Shark Joins Ranks of Cryptic Creatures
Researchers report that the shark's single eye is made of functional optical tissue, so it's not a fake
In this world of Photoshop and online scams, it pays to have a hearty
dose of skepticism at reports of something strange—including an albino
fetal shark with one eye smack in the middle of its nose like a Cyclops.
But the Cyclops shark, sliced from the belly of a pregnant mama dusky
shark caught by a commercial fisherman in the Gulf of California
earlier this summer, is by all reports the real thing. Shark researchers
have examined the preserved creature and found that its single eye is
made of functional optical tissue, they said last week. It's unlikely,
however, that the malformed creature would have survived outside the
womb.
"This is extremely rare," shark expert Felipe Galvan Magana of
Mexico's Centro Interdisciplinario de Ciencias del Mar told the Pisces
Fleet Sportfishing blog in July. "As far as I know, less than 50
examples of an abnormality like this have been recorded." [See photos of the one-eyed "Cyclops" shark]
Pisces Fleet, a sportfishing company, rocketed the Cyclops shark to
viral status online this summer with their photos of the creepy-cute
creature. But this isn't the first time that reports of a
mythical-seeming creature have spurred media sensations — last week
alone, Russian officials announced "proof" of a Yeti, and paleontologists spun a theory about an ancient Kraken-like squid. Few reports of mythical beasts, however, come with proof.
Read more at: Scientific American
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