From the University of Tokyo (Japan), Dr. Using an underwater drone, Yasunori Kano discovered black eggs at a depth of 6,200 meters in the Kuril-Kamchatsky Trench in the northwestern Pacific Ocean. Kano lifted them from the depths with an apparatus and Dr. He showed it to Keiichi Kakuya.
According to Kakuya, quoted by the publication IflScienceFor the first time he had to see something like this: the scientist cut one of the eggs under a stereomicroscope and some kind of milky liquid flowed out of it. The scientist collected it with a pipette and then noticed the white bodies in the egg – then everything fell into place.
It turns out that researchers discovered flatworm eggs; This is the first time these have been studied in the early stages of life and generally encountered at such depth.
The results of the study showed that the worms belonged to the team maricola Crew Trikladia. The authors of the scientific study also noted that there is no major difference in the development of flatworms living in deep and shallow water.