00:05Across black deep sea water, bizarre fish, sharks, octopuses and crabs survive crushing
00:10pressure and near total darkness. The barrel-eye fish hovers below Monterey Bay with green
00:16tubular eyes turning inside a transparent skull to scan prey above. The goblin shark
00:21waits in deep Pacific water, then fires its jaw forward to snatch prey without chasing
00:26through darkness. The Dumbo octopus glides near the seafloor with ear-like fins, saving
00:31energy instead of spraying ink like shallow-water octopuses. The vampire squid flips its webbed
00:37arms over its body, showing spines and glowing photophores when predators move through oxygen-poor
00:42twilight. The anglerfish waves a glowing forehead lure in black water, drawing smaller fish toward
00:48a mouth that can swallow oversized prey. The giant isopod crawls across the deep seafloor
00:54like an armored pill bug, slowing its metabolism between rare sunken meals. The yeti crab waves
01:00bacteria-covered claws beside hydrothermal vents, farming food from chemical-rich water near scalding
01:05volcanic openings. The dragonfish flashes invisible red light from its body, hunting prey that cannot
01:11see the beam cutting through darkness. The hatchetfish hangs like a silver blade, using belly lights to
01:17match the faint glow falling from the surface. The snailfish cruises nearly 26,000 feet below the
01:24surface, where its soft body bends under pressure that would crush other fish. In the ocean's deepest
01:30places, strange bodies, glowing organs, and patient hunters turn darkness into a survival tool. Far below
01:36sunlight, the next shadow with teeth may already be waiting.
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