You’ll Never Guess Where Earth’s Largest Migration Happens



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The most important (and most mysterious!) migration on the earth occurs each evening within the ocean as 10 billion tons of zooplankton swim to the floor to feed. This undersea journey is called Diel vertical migration, and it happens in each ocean on the earth. By studying extra about why this occurs, science can unlock the secrets and techniques behind different phenomena, like our organic clocks…and even local weather change.

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References: https://websites.google.com/view/earths-greatest-migration-refs/dwelling

Try Untold Earth and the PBS Earth Month Playlist: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-BVHSUMAWR4&record=PLzkQfVIJun2J5q9CIXPAlL95FSb0tJul7&index=2

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43 thoughts on “You’ll Never Guess Where Earth’s Largest Migration Happens”

  1. The problem with the sinking of CO2 into the ocean depth is that many small animals that build shells and exoskeletons cannot do this if the acidity gets too high. Already not this is starting to become a problem, alongside the temperature incease. The IPCC clearly makes that point.

    Reply
  2. MedCram talked about melatonin research that pointed out that our melatonin levels in daytime are orders of magnitude greater than the nighttime levels produced by the pituitary. Daytime infrared from the sun penetrates into the body, triggering melatonin production by mitochondria all over the body where IR reaches. It is a critical factor for certain metabolic processes, so it seems our nighttime supply is in part to compensate for the lack of production, supplying around 5% of our daily melatonin supply.

    So, we, too, are responding to the daily cycles of solar infrared and the nighttime loss of melatonin production.

    Reply
  3. At the end he said "I'm sorry" and I'm thinking, no you're not. That terrible pun was on porpoise, you take that sorry back. And then he did. And now I'm here writing a comment about it. Existence is weird.

    Reply

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