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NEVRL8T
10-18-2011, 10:50am
http://l2.yimg.com/bt/api/res/1.2/ZE.vtGpI33AazjyAeGSQUg--/YXBwaWQ9eW5ld3M7Zmk9aW5zZXQ7aD0zODQ7cT04NTt3PTUxMg--/http://l.yimg.com/os/152/2011/10/18/cyclops-shark-111017_124158.jpg

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.

Cyclops shark

The Cyclops shark is an exception. While rare, "cyclopia" is a real developmental anomaly in which only one eye develops. Human fetuses are sometimes affected, as in a 1982 case in Israel reported in 1985 in the British Journal of Ophthalmology. In that case, a baby girl was born seven weeks early with no nose and only one eye in the center of her face. The infant, who lived only 30 minutes after birth, also had severe brain abnormalities.

In 2006, a kitten born with one eye and no nose (a rare condition called holoprosencephaly), created a stir online as news organizations and bloggers tried to determine if the bizarre
photos of the animal were real. A veterinarian confirmed the kitten's condition; "Cy," as the cat was known, lived only a day. The remains were sold to the creationist Lost World Museum.

The fisherman who discovered the Cyclops shark is reportedly hanging on to the preserved remains, news outlets reported. But scientists have recently examined and X-rayed the fish, authenticating the catch. According to Seth Romans, a spokesman for Pisces Fleet, Galvan Magana and his colleagues will publish a scientific paper about the find within the next several weeks.

Romans told LiveScience that the fisherman who caught the strange shark is "amazed and fascinated" by the attention his catch has drawn.

It's not the first strange shark fetus Galvan Magana has found; he and his colleagues discovered two-headed shark embryos in two different female blue sharks. It's possible that one embryo started to split into twins, but failed to completely separate because of crowding in the womb, the researchers reported in January 2011 in the journal Marine Biodiversity Records.

Cyclops Shark & Other Cryptic Creatures Make October Creepy - Yahoo! News (http://news.yahoo.com/cyclops-shark-other-cryptic-creatures-october-creepy-113008213.html)

jaxgator
10-18-2011, 10:56am
Looks like some kind of cartoon character. :lol:

NeedSpeed
10-18-2011, 10:56am
:willy:

NEVRL8T
10-18-2011, 10:59am
Looks like some kind of cartoon character. :lol:

What if you had of reeled that thing in? Jesus, I would throw it back, reel & rod included.

jaxgator
10-18-2011, 11:01am
What if you had of reeled that thing in? Jesus, I would throw it back, reel & rod included.

Yeah, it'd pretty much put enough scare in me to do the same. :lol:

Rob
10-18-2011, 11:02am
I wonder if it taste like bacon

NEVRL8T
10-18-2011, 11:05am
I wonder if it taste like bacon

I say more like Plutonium.

NeedSpeed
10-18-2011, 2:01pm
What if you had of reeled that thing in? Jesus, I would throw it back, reel & rod included.

Not even sure I'd go near water again.

American Made
10-18-2011, 2:57pm
Looks like some kind of cartoon character. :lol:

:iagree: Looks like a Pixar/Disney character. :lol:

Blademaker
10-18-2011, 2:59pm
I don't think that a shark eye has an iris in it.

nhlgopens
10-18-2011, 3:33pm
http://l2.yimg.com/bt/api/res/1.2/ZE.vtGpI33AazjyAeGSQUg--/YXBwaWQ9eW5ld3M7Zmk9aW5zZXQ7aD0zODQ7cT04NTt3PTUxMg--/http://l.yimg.com/os/152/2011/10/18/cyclops-shark-111017_124158.jpg


Pewter99?

:leaving:

Yerf Dog
10-18-2011, 3:55pm
http://assets.nydailynews.com/img/2011/10/19/alg_cyclops_shark_02.jpg

Cybercowboy
10-18-2011, 4:32pm
Blinky the shark!

Nemesis
10-18-2011, 6:18pm
What if you had of reeled that thing in? Jesus, I would throw it back, reel & rod included.

Miller light fishing commercial - YouTube

OddBall
10-18-2011, 7:47pm
awww....so cute :angel:

joecaver
10-19-2011, 4:04am
that is the strangest looking thing ever.

Scissors
10-19-2011, 8:48am
I don't think that a shark eye has an iris in it.

No, they do.

http://www.marinebiodiversity.ca/shark/english/NICITATING_MEMBRANE_IN_BLUE_SHARK.jpg

PUPIL

Unlike teleosts (bony fish), most sharks have a dynamic iris that can increase the size of the pupil in dim light or decrease it in bright light. The shape of the pupil varies amongst species depending upon their respective feeding strategies. The pupil can be circular (eg. Most deep sea sharks, which have less mobile pupils for more constant, low light conditions), vertical slit (eg. Carcharhinus spp., Negaprion brevirostris), horizontal slit (eg. Sphyrna tiburo), oblique slit (eg. Schyliorhinus canicula, Glinglymostoma cirratum), or crescent-shaped (eg. Many skates and rays) (Carrier et al., 2004). Mobile slit pupils are typically found in active predators with periods of activity in both photopic (bright light) and scotopic (dim light) conditions, such as the Lemon shark, N. brevirostris (Gruber, 1967); a slit pupil that can be closed down to a pinhole is thought to be the best way to achieve the smallest aperture under photopic conditions, because a circular pupil is mechanically constrained from closing to a complete pibhole (Walls, 1942).

SOS - Vision in Sharks (http://www.supportoursharks.com/SOS_Shark_Biology_Sensorysystems_Vision.htm)

erickpl
10-19-2011, 9:49am
Looks like some kind of cartoon character. :lol:

http://l2.yimg.com/bt/api/res/1.2/XSYvTxKGQVI7gszFdm84bw--/YXBwaWQ9eW5ld3M7Y2g9NzQyO2NyPTE7Y3c9OTkwO2R4PTA7ZHk9MDtmaT11bGNyb3A7aD00NzM7cT04NTt3PTYzMA--/http://l.yimg.com/os/152/2011/10/18/one-eyed-cyclops-shark-pup-holding-face--s990x743--p_191050.jpg

http://www.blackberryforums.com.au/gallery/files/2/mike_wazowski_monsters_inc.jpg

Reading the article, it was pulled from another shark they caught (ie it was a baby shark and it wasn't done cooking yet) and likely wouldn't have survived after birth.

I bet the depth perception woulda been a bitch...

Blademaker
10-19-2011, 10:00am
No, they do.

http://www.marinebiodiversity.ca/shark/english/NICITATING_MEMBRANE_IN_BLUE_SHARK.jpg


SOS - Vision in Sharks (http://www.supportoursharks.com/SOS_Shark_Biology_Sensorysystems_Vision.htm)

Interesting........learn something new every day.
Thanks...:seasix:

Scissors
10-19-2011, 10:43am
Interesting........learn something new every day.
Thanks...:seasix:
I was big into sharks as a kid. Wanted to become a marine biologist to study them.

NEVRL8T
10-19-2011, 11:21am
I have heard of the one eyed Moby Dick but that takes the cake.

itsaz
10-19-2011, 11:21am
http://i214.photobucket.com/albums/cc141/itsaztb/MotorHome.jpg

NEVRL8T
10-19-2011, 11:35am
http://i214.photobucket.com/albums/cc141/itsaztb/MotorHome.jpg

:lol::iagree: