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How Accurate Is Finding Nemo?

A marine biologist explains the accuracy of Finding Nemo's depiction of ocean life. #WIRED #marinebiology Still haven’t subscribed to WIRED on YouTube? ►► http://wrd.cm/15fP7B7 Listen to the Get WIRED podcast ►► https://link.chtbl.com/wired-ytc-desc Want more WIRED? Get the magazine ►► https://subscribe.wired.com/subscribe/splits/wired/WIR_YouTube?source=EDT_WIR_YouTube_0_Video_Description_ZZ Follow WIRED: Instagram ►►https://instagram.com/wired Twitter ►►http://www.twitter.com/wired Facebook ►►https://www.facebook.com/wired Tik Tok ►►https://www.tiktok.com/@wired Get more incredible stories on science and tech with our daily newsletter: https://wrd.cm/DailyYT Also, check out the free WIRED channel on Roku, Apple TV, Amazon Fire TV, and Android TV. ABOUT WIRED WIRED is where tomorrow is realized. Through thought-provoking stories and videos, WIRED explores the future of business, innovation, and culture.

WIRED

12 hours ago

is Finding Nemo an accurate representation of ocean life yes and no one thing that they did get right is that clown fish do in fact live in an enemies and they are in fact immune to the stings of the enemies one thing that is pretty different is that clown fishes actually can change their sex so in the movie Nemo's mom gets eaten and in real life after a female clownish is eaten or dies the largest male will then become the female so Marlin in fighting Nemo would have actually become a female cl
ownish and laid his own clutch of eggs within probably the next week or two so another thing that's different is Bruce the shark so in the movie Bruce the shark is a male shark but if you look close Bruce the shark does not have claspers claspers are the male intermittent organ uh their sharks have they're on their pelvic fins they're basically two very long penises clear as dead and Bruce doesn't have them so Bruce is technically maybe a female shark

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