Tim Tialdo Documentary Narration

Profile photo for Tim Tialdo
Not Yet Rated
0:00
Documentaries
25
0

Description

Oceanic Aliens is an internationally award winning short documentary that explores one aspect of how little we truly know about planet earth. More is known about outer space than our very own oceans. This short documentary illustrates just one example of a little known class of marine species and their amazing attributes. The producer was looking for a manly Mike Rowe type narration voice for the project.

Read More

Vocal Characteristics

Language

English

Voice Age

Middle Aged (35-54)

Accents

North American (General) North American (US General American - GenAM) North American (US Midwest- Chicago, Great Lakes)

Transcript

Note: Transcripts are generated using speech recognition software and may contain errors.
speaks the final frontier, it could be argued. Mawr is known about other planets and star systems than our very own oceans. The lunar surface is map at 714 times the resolution of the ocean floor. Over 500 humans have visited space, yet only three have personally seen the Marianas trench. 95% of our oceans remain un explored, with new discoveries on nearly every deep sea expedition. Even so, one need not ventured to the depths of the ocean to encounter creatures beyond the wildest dreams. Every night in the open ocean, a mass migration of alien like species occurs, drifting with ocean currents. These creatures gather near the surface, attracted by microscopic fighter plane. Amazing displays of bioluminescent light both attract food borne off predators with a light show more closely resembling a view into outer space. This for Scalia Edwards. I attracts small fish and plankton. It's colorfully let tentacles and is one of only a handful of marine species known to emit red light. While siphon owe fours look like a single creature, they are actually a collection of highly specialized, genetically identical individuals known as zoo IDs, some A responsible for locomotion, some for reproduction and some for capturing and digesting food. A single colony can contain thousands of individuals. Zoo Lloyd's function, like organs of a multi cellular organism, similarly cannot survive independent thing. Bioluminescence is not always used to attract prey, as evidenced with this pie result. Each zoo roid is only a few millimeters in size and filters out microscopic fighter plane unique in being one of just a few marine organisms to luminous in response to light. It is thought that pirate Soames used their blue green glow to communicate possible danger and to camouflage against the sunlit surface of the ocean Way to blend in with open ocean salps have a transparent body much like jellyfish, but are in fact, more closely related to humans. With a rudimentary central nervous system and internal organs, they're among the fastest growing multicellular organisms on Earth, capable of enormous population increases. When food sources abound, functioning in synchronized colonies a swell as individuals salps pump water through their hollow bodies to both feed and move simultaneous Ah, much slower mode of locomotion. Tina Force employed eight rows of light refracting cilia to gently propel them through the water comb jelly, as it's commonly known, uses to aural lobes lined with touch sensitive receptors capture anything small enough to fit into its primitive mouth, often mistaken for jellyfish due to the presence of tentacles and a clear, jelly like form, The similarities end there. What look like the stinging tentacles of a jellyfish are in fact, quite harmless. At least two anything large enough to avoid being caught While the purpose is the same Tina, four tentacles are lined with sticky sounds used to capture prey similar to the way a spider uses its web. The variety of Tina four body types is astounding. Capable of growing toe links well over a meter, Venus Girdle uses sticky tentacles along the leading edge of its body to ensnare small zooplankton. When startled, the Venus girdle undulates its body in wormlike fashion to escape potential harm. By some estimates, 90% of all marine species air yet to be discovered. Earth's oceans are a source of food, energy, climate and other untold resource is ready and waiting to be explored.