MARVEL OF GOD'S CREATION #6
The Angler Fish
One of God's amazing creations is the
deep-sea
Angler fish. This fish makes its home more than a mile deep in
ocean
water. On her forehead the female has a "fishing rod" tipped
with an
"artificial worm". She dangles this "bait" over her mouth to
attract her
next meal. Ah, but there is a problem -- her next meal
cannot
see the bait, since it is too dark under more than a mile of sea
water.
Starvation sets in while she waits for her first deep sea fish
dinner.
At last, she realizes "I must do something about this darkness
problem".
But, alas, it is too late. She is dead and dead fish can not
evolve the
adaptations needed to rectify problems, even though evolution
says she
doesn't evolve something until her situation (or environment)
tells her
that it is needed to survive.
The only possibility is that God created the
Angler fish
with all the fully-functional equipment it needed to survive at
great
depths. To solve the darkness problem, God created a special
kind of
light on the bait. This light displays highly advanced
technology -- it gives off no heat! A compound called
Luciferin is oxidized with the help of an enzyme scientists
named
Luciferase, and this reaction produces heatless light. Ask an
evolutionist how a deep-sea fish could evolve the ability to
produce
high-tech light on an artificial bait dangled over the fish's
mouth? God
has made His creation to display His glory and power. No one
could look
at the Angler fish and say it is the result of the "impersonal
plus time
plus chance", unless that person had already decided to refuse
to
believe in the God of the Bible (Romans 1). The vain
speculations of
evolution lead to foolish thinking and impossible
conclusions.
Naturally, the Angler fish needs to reproduce
and has a
special way of doing this. In the darkness of the deep, it is
difficult
for the male and female to find each other. God designed the
eggs of the
female so that they float up through a mile of ocean to the
surface. On
the ocean surface the eggs form a jellylike mass and then hatch.
The
young fish, male and female, grow and mature in the surface
waters. At a
certain point in their development, the male finds a female and
bites
and holds on to her abdomen. Soon the tissues of the female grow
into
and attach to the mouth tissues of the male, and the female
drops to the
bottom of the ocean carrying her parasite male with her not to
separate
"til death do they part". He found her in the light of the
surface
waters, so he does not have to grope around in the dark of the
deep
looking for a mate. How could all of this evolve when it is so
ultra-specialized and unique?
Why does the female not chase the male away when
he bites
her abdomen? Evolution provides no explanation. What possible
evolutionary mechanism enables the male's circulatory system to
merge
with the female's? And from what creature did this peculiar fish
evolve?
Evolution has no answers.
A major difference between the Angler fish and
other fish
is the Angler's lack of a swim bladder, which is an air sac to
provide
buoyancy and to prevent sinking. If it had evolved without an
air
bladder, it would sink and die. If it had an air bladder and had
evolved
the bait and light in surface waters, it would be easy prey for
other
predators and "survival of the fittest" would force it into
extinction.
Another feature of the deep sea Angler is its
special
body, which is designed to prevent crushing. A pressure of over
2,000
pounds per square inch is exerted on the body of the fish at one
mile
deep. It survives this great pressure with no problem. On the
other
hand, if the first Anglers were surface fish and lost their air
bladders, (through let's say, some unexplainable genetic
mutation) and
then sank to the bottom of the sea, they would have been
crushed. Dead
animals don't evolve any further.
The deep-sea Angler had to have been created
with all its
special equipment fully functional. God says that as we study
His
creation, it should cause our thoughts to focus on the Creator
and to
give Him thanks and honor Him as God (Romans 1).
For a super
treatment
of the Angler fish and other highly specialized animals read: The Natural Limits to
Biological
Change, by Lane P. Lester and
Raymond G.
Bohlin (Zondervan, 1984).
TOP NEXT
CHAPTER PREVIOUS
CHAPTER TABLE
OF CONTENTS