Anonymous at Thu, 13 Feb 2025 01:30:48 UTC No. 16584198
>>16584152
he gaan
Anonymous at Thu, 13 Feb 2025 01:57:39 UTC No. 16584220
the other fish probably called him a schizo when he said there's an entire world out there outside of the bounds of the deep depths of their home and he wanted to prove a point
Anonymous at Thu, 13 Feb 2025 02:27:10 UTC No. 16584230
I'm guessing he has a fucked swim bladder and doesn't like the sun.
Anonymous at Thu, 13 Feb 2025 06:48:32 UTC No. 16584389
>>16584152
I thought they melted if they went to low pressure because of how their flesh evolved to be in high pressure deep ocean environments.
Anonymous at Thu, 13 Feb 2025 09:02:07 UTC No. 16584467
>>16584389
It's probably like the bends, come up really slow and it's cool, come up in a hurry and die.
I don't think anyone catching them on a line or net is taking days to pull them up.
Anonymous at Thu, 13 Feb 2025 09:08:50 UTC No. 16584471
>>16584467
No matter how slowly you descend to pressures beyond your flesh's capacity, the pressure will still crush you. Bends is about nitrogen concentrations, not pressure effects.
Anonymous at Thu, 13 Feb 2025 09:10:05 UTC No. 16584472
>>16584471
So why can't the fish off-gas or slowly leak fluid? We are talking about something deep coming up not something going too deep.
Anonymous at Thu, 13 Feb 2025 09:18:29 UTC No. 16584477
>>16584472
>off-gas or slowly leak fluid?
The problem is the actual physical makeup of its bones and flesh needing the pressure it evolved in to operate properly, not of extra gas or fluid in it.
Anonymous at Thu, 13 Feb 2025 22:38:02 UTC No. 16585207
>>16584471
>pressures beyond your flesh's capacity
The fish is mostly water, pressure won't do much structurally, unless the body has some confining structures that it could affect. I do think that deep sea fish dying when they surface is largely due to pressure affecting solubility of gasses. When brought to surface quickly, substances in the fishes' blood and tissues outgas faster than the body can handle