1 00:00:02,040 --> 00:00:07,120 Speaker 1: Welcome to brainstuff from how stuff works. Hey, brain stuff, 2 00:00:07,160 --> 00:00:10,920 Speaker 1: Lauren vocal bomb here. Some animals are just over the top. 3 00:00:11,320 --> 00:00:15,360 Speaker 1: Take scorpions. Is it not enough that these stinging arachnids 4 00:00:15,440 --> 00:00:17,919 Speaker 1: can survive some of the harshest climates in the world 5 00:00:18,120 --> 00:00:21,120 Speaker 1: and live twenty five times longer than your average cockroach? 6 00:00:21,680 --> 00:00:24,840 Speaker 1: Or that some species don't need males to reproduce and 7 00:00:24,840 --> 00:00:27,840 Speaker 1: can live up to forty eight hours without oxygen, and 8 00:00:28,160 --> 00:00:31,120 Speaker 1: that all of them will eat almost anything they can subdue, 9 00:00:31,560 --> 00:00:36,040 Speaker 1: even other scorpions. No, it's apparently not enough, because scorpions 10 00:00:36,280 --> 00:00:42,520 Speaker 1: also glow electric cian green under ultra violet light. Why 11 00:00:42,600 --> 00:00:44,400 Speaker 1: they do this is a bit of a mystery, but 12 00:00:44,520 --> 00:00:47,400 Speaker 1: it makes them pretty easy to study. All a scorpion 13 00:00:47,440 --> 00:00:49,559 Speaker 1: researcher and has to do to find scorpions is go 14 00:00:49,640 --> 00:00:51,319 Speaker 1: out into the desert at night with a black light 15 00:00:51,520 --> 00:00:55,640 Speaker 1: and watch those suckers light up like Christmas trees. Chemically speaking, 16 00:00:55,840 --> 00:00:59,080 Speaker 1: nobody's exactly sure what causes scorpions to glow, but we 17 00:00:59,200 --> 00:01:02,160 Speaker 1: know it's power full stuff. When a scorpion is preserved 18 00:01:02,160 --> 00:01:06,520 Speaker 1: in alcohol, the alcohol itself will fluoresce. Scorpion fossils have 19 00:01:06,640 --> 00:01:09,520 Speaker 1: even been induced to glow under black light after hundreds 20 00:01:09,560 --> 00:01:13,400 Speaker 1: of millions of years. What we do know is the 21 00:01:13,480 --> 00:01:16,480 Speaker 1: chemicals that make a scorpion so rave ready are in 22 00:01:16,560 --> 00:01:20,560 Speaker 1: the outer layer or cuticle, of its exo skeleton. Scientists 23 00:01:20,600 --> 00:01:24,039 Speaker 1: call it the highland layer. Scorpions molt their exo skeleton 24 00:01:24,080 --> 00:01:26,720 Speaker 1: every so often in order to grow, and researchers have 25 00:01:26,800 --> 00:01:31,120 Speaker 1: observed that until the slightly mushy outer shell has entirely hardened, 26 00:01:31,319 --> 00:01:35,759 Speaker 1: the highland layer does not fluoresce under UV light. This 27 00:01:35,920 --> 00:01:38,760 Speaker 1: is all pretty weird. Why would an animal evolve to 28 00:01:38,840 --> 00:01:42,720 Speaker 1: glow under ultraviolet light? Researchers have posited a bunch of 29 00:01:42,760 --> 00:01:46,240 Speaker 1: different ideas. Scorpion fluorescence might help them find each other 30 00:01:46,280 --> 00:01:49,200 Speaker 1: in the dark, protect them from sunlight, or even confuse 31 00:01:49,240 --> 00:01:54,120 Speaker 1: their prey. But there's another promising theory that scorpions are 32 00:01:54,200 --> 00:01:58,440 Speaker 1: somehow using their fluorescence to detect UV light, mostly because 33 00:01:58,440 --> 00:02:01,080 Speaker 1: they want to avoid it. There night hunters, after all, 34 00:02:01,240 --> 00:02:03,920 Speaker 1: and a scorpion will always find the darkest place to 35 00:02:03,960 --> 00:02:06,200 Speaker 1: hang out during the day or even in the moonlight. 36 00:02:07,080 --> 00:02:11,600 Speaker 1: A study published in the Journal of Arachnology tested normal 37 00:02:11,919 --> 00:02:15,280 Speaker 1: fluorescing scorpions and a group of scorpions that they had 38 00:02:15,320 --> 00:02:18,880 Speaker 1: reduced the fluorescence of with prolonged exposure to UV light. 39 00:02:19,560 --> 00:02:23,320 Speaker 1: The normal scorpions then reacted more strongly and negatively to 40 00:02:23,440 --> 00:02:28,240 Speaker 1: UV light than the desensitized scorpions. But wait, you might 41 00:02:28,320 --> 00:02:32,000 Speaker 1: be thinking. Scorpions still have eyes, and as it turns out, 42 00:02:32,080 --> 00:02:35,200 Speaker 1: they can visually see light within the ultra violet part 43 00:02:35,200 --> 00:02:38,120 Speaker 1: of the spectrum, but it doesn't seem like the scorpions 44 00:02:38,120 --> 00:02:42,560 Speaker 1: were reacting visually. A separate study published an Animal Behavior 45 00:02:42,600 --> 00:02:47,000 Speaker 1: in basically blindfolded a group of scorpions and found that 46 00:02:47,040 --> 00:02:50,160 Speaker 1: the critters still reacted to the presence of ultraviolet light. 47 00:02:50,840 --> 00:02:54,000 Speaker 1: So it seems that they're using their entire bodies as 48 00:02:54,360 --> 00:02:58,160 Speaker 1: giant UV seeking eyeballs, and that if they sense that 49 00:02:58,200 --> 00:03:01,520 Speaker 1: they're glowing at all, it's time to scurry up somewhere darker. 50 00:03:06,639 --> 00:03:09,160 Speaker 1: Today's episode was written by Jesseline Shields and produced by 51 00:03:09,160 --> 00:03:11,440 Speaker 1: Tyler Clang. For more on this and lots of other 52 00:03:11,480 --> 00:03:25,880 Speaker 1: glowing topics, visit our home planet, how stuff Works dot com.