Is it possible to create light emitting creatures using selective breeding?












3















Suppose I take a group of alligators select the ones that emit the highest frequency of radiation (since all living creatures emit thermal radiation), and I breed those, and get rid of the rest and continue this for thousands of generations. Is it possible, that at one point the frequency of that radiation becomes high enough to enter the visible light spectrum?



My theory is that, since the criteria we have selected for the selective breeding is high frequency radiation, a point should come where the radiation becomes high enough for us to see, because after all, it is the body that is creating the energy, which depends on the genes of the alligators.



And if it is possible, could we exceed the visible light spectrum? Maybe reach a point where the alligators start emitting X-Rays or Gamma Rays? And do you think the alligators, as creatures, would completely change in order to keep up with the selective breeding system?



EDIT:



After seeing the answer's I've got, I remembered that alligators are cold-blooded, so would this work for warm blooded animals like monkeys, or any animal if possible?










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  • 5





    Black body radiation becomes visible around 798 K (525 °C, 977 °F) (the Draper point). That's one hot alligator.

    – AlexP
    5 hours ago








  • 1





    You'd be better served looking at bioluminescence but alligators have no useful precursors I'm aware of you could exaggerate through selective breeding which means you'd have to wait a damn long time for any useful mutations headed in that direction, far better to simply use the same gene splicing.

    – Pelinore
    2 hours ago













  • @Pelinore Still, is it possible though? (see the edit in my question)

    – ѕняєє ѕιиgнι
    2 hours ago











  • very unlikely in any reasonable time frame if you're using only selective breeding & if you're sticking to "high frequency radiation" causing it to glow rather than bioluminescence not at all, any animal putting off enough of that to glow in the normal (visible to humans) light spectrum is going to cook itself, so dead.

    – Pelinore
    2 hours ago













  • @Pelinore What if the creature finds another way to create radiation, other than regular blackbody radiation? Do you think it's possible?

    – ѕняєє ѕιиgнι
    2 hours ago
















3















Suppose I take a group of alligators select the ones that emit the highest frequency of radiation (since all living creatures emit thermal radiation), and I breed those, and get rid of the rest and continue this for thousands of generations. Is it possible, that at one point the frequency of that radiation becomes high enough to enter the visible light spectrum?



My theory is that, since the criteria we have selected for the selective breeding is high frequency radiation, a point should come where the radiation becomes high enough for us to see, because after all, it is the body that is creating the energy, which depends on the genes of the alligators.



And if it is possible, could we exceed the visible light spectrum? Maybe reach a point where the alligators start emitting X-Rays or Gamma Rays? And do you think the alligators, as creatures, would completely change in order to keep up with the selective breeding system?



EDIT:



After seeing the answer's I've got, I remembered that alligators are cold-blooded, so would this work for warm blooded animals like monkeys, or any animal if possible?










share|improve this question









New contributor




ѕняєє ѕιиgнι is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
















  • 5





    Black body radiation becomes visible around 798 K (525 °C, 977 °F) (the Draper point). That's one hot alligator.

    – AlexP
    5 hours ago








  • 1





    You'd be better served looking at bioluminescence but alligators have no useful precursors I'm aware of you could exaggerate through selective breeding which means you'd have to wait a damn long time for any useful mutations headed in that direction, far better to simply use the same gene splicing.

    – Pelinore
    2 hours ago













  • @Pelinore Still, is it possible though? (see the edit in my question)

    – ѕняєє ѕιиgнι
    2 hours ago











  • very unlikely in any reasonable time frame if you're using only selective breeding & if you're sticking to "high frequency radiation" causing it to glow rather than bioluminescence not at all, any animal putting off enough of that to glow in the normal (visible to humans) light spectrum is going to cook itself, so dead.

    – Pelinore
    2 hours ago













  • @Pelinore What if the creature finds another way to create radiation, other than regular blackbody radiation? Do you think it's possible?

    – ѕняєє ѕιиgнι
    2 hours ago














3












3








3


1






Suppose I take a group of alligators select the ones that emit the highest frequency of radiation (since all living creatures emit thermal radiation), and I breed those, and get rid of the rest and continue this for thousands of generations. Is it possible, that at one point the frequency of that radiation becomes high enough to enter the visible light spectrum?



My theory is that, since the criteria we have selected for the selective breeding is high frequency radiation, a point should come where the radiation becomes high enough for us to see, because after all, it is the body that is creating the energy, which depends on the genes of the alligators.



And if it is possible, could we exceed the visible light spectrum? Maybe reach a point where the alligators start emitting X-Rays or Gamma Rays? And do you think the alligators, as creatures, would completely change in order to keep up with the selective breeding system?



EDIT:



After seeing the answer's I've got, I remembered that alligators are cold-blooded, so would this work for warm blooded animals like monkeys, or any animal if possible?










share|improve this question









New contributor




ѕняєє ѕιиgнι is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.












Suppose I take a group of alligators select the ones that emit the highest frequency of radiation (since all living creatures emit thermal radiation), and I breed those, and get rid of the rest and continue this for thousands of generations. Is it possible, that at one point the frequency of that radiation becomes high enough to enter the visible light spectrum?



My theory is that, since the criteria we have selected for the selective breeding is high frequency radiation, a point should come where the radiation becomes high enough for us to see, because after all, it is the body that is creating the energy, which depends on the genes of the alligators.



And if it is possible, could we exceed the visible light spectrum? Maybe reach a point where the alligators start emitting X-Rays or Gamma Rays? And do you think the alligators, as creatures, would completely change in order to keep up with the selective breeding system?



EDIT:



After seeing the answer's I've got, I remembered that alligators are cold-blooded, so would this work for warm blooded animals like monkeys, or any animal if possible?







science-based xenobiology electromagnetism






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share|improve this question









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edited 4 hours ago







ѕняєє ѕιиgнι













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asked 6 hours ago









ѕняєє ѕιиgнιѕняєє ѕιиgнι

1193




1193




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New contributor





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  • 5





    Black body radiation becomes visible around 798 K (525 °C, 977 °F) (the Draper point). That's one hot alligator.

    – AlexP
    5 hours ago








  • 1





    You'd be better served looking at bioluminescence but alligators have no useful precursors I'm aware of you could exaggerate through selective breeding which means you'd have to wait a damn long time for any useful mutations headed in that direction, far better to simply use the same gene splicing.

    – Pelinore
    2 hours ago













  • @Pelinore Still, is it possible though? (see the edit in my question)

    – ѕняєє ѕιиgнι
    2 hours ago











  • very unlikely in any reasonable time frame if you're using only selective breeding & if you're sticking to "high frequency radiation" causing it to glow rather than bioluminescence not at all, any animal putting off enough of that to glow in the normal (visible to humans) light spectrum is going to cook itself, so dead.

    – Pelinore
    2 hours ago













  • @Pelinore What if the creature finds another way to create radiation, other than regular blackbody radiation? Do you think it's possible?

    – ѕняєє ѕιиgнι
    2 hours ago














  • 5





    Black body radiation becomes visible around 798 K (525 °C, 977 °F) (the Draper point). That's one hot alligator.

    – AlexP
    5 hours ago








  • 1





    You'd be better served looking at bioluminescence but alligators have no useful precursors I'm aware of you could exaggerate through selective breeding which means you'd have to wait a damn long time for any useful mutations headed in that direction, far better to simply use the same gene splicing.

    – Pelinore
    2 hours ago













  • @Pelinore Still, is it possible though? (see the edit in my question)

    – ѕняєє ѕιиgнι
    2 hours ago











  • very unlikely in any reasonable time frame if you're using only selective breeding & if you're sticking to "high frequency radiation" causing it to glow rather than bioluminescence not at all, any animal putting off enough of that to glow in the normal (visible to humans) light spectrum is going to cook itself, so dead.

    – Pelinore
    2 hours ago













  • @Pelinore What if the creature finds another way to create radiation, other than regular blackbody radiation? Do you think it's possible?

    – ѕняєє ѕιиgнι
    2 hours ago








5




5





Black body radiation becomes visible around 798 K (525 °C, 977 °F) (the Draper point). That's one hot alligator.

– AlexP
5 hours ago







Black body radiation becomes visible around 798 K (525 °C, 977 °F) (the Draper point). That's one hot alligator.

– AlexP
5 hours ago






1




1





You'd be better served looking at bioluminescence but alligators have no useful precursors I'm aware of you could exaggerate through selective breeding which means you'd have to wait a damn long time for any useful mutations headed in that direction, far better to simply use the same gene splicing.

– Pelinore
2 hours ago







You'd be better served looking at bioluminescence but alligators have no useful precursors I'm aware of you could exaggerate through selective breeding which means you'd have to wait a damn long time for any useful mutations headed in that direction, far better to simply use the same gene splicing.

– Pelinore
2 hours ago















@Pelinore Still, is it possible though? (see the edit in my question)

– ѕняєє ѕιиgнι
2 hours ago





@Pelinore Still, is it possible though? (see the edit in my question)

– ѕняєє ѕιиgнι
2 hours ago













very unlikely in any reasonable time frame if you're using only selective breeding & if you're sticking to "high frequency radiation" causing it to glow rather than bioluminescence not at all, any animal putting off enough of that to glow in the normal (visible to humans) light spectrum is going to cook itself, so dead.

– Pelinore
2 hours ago







very unlikely in any reasonable time frame if you're using only selective breeding & if you're sticking to "high frequency radiation" causing it to glow rather than bioluminescence not at all, any animal putting off enough of that to glow in the normal (visible to humans) light spectrum is going to cook itself, so dead.

– Pelinore
2 hours ago















@Pelinore What if the creature finds another way to create radiation, other than regular blackbody radiation? Do you think it's possible?

– ѕняєє ѕιиgнι
2 hours ago





@Pelinore What if the creature finds another way to create radiation, other than regular blackbody radiation? Do you think it's possible?

– ѕняєє ѕιиgнι
2 hours ago










3 Answers
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No, it doesn't work that way.




I select the ones that emit the highest frequency of radiation (since all living creatures emit thermal radiation)




Black body radiation is emitted by anything above the temperature of 0 K. Alligators, being cold blooded animals, are just at the same temperature of their environment. There is no thing such a hotter or colder alligator, you would basically pick some based on the local environmental temperature (i.e. sunlight or shade).




Is it possible, that at one point the frequency of that radiation becomes high enough to enter the visible light spectrum? Could we exceed the visible light spectrum? Maybe reach a point where the alligators start emitting X-Rays or Gamma Rays?




Different wavelengths are emitted as a consequence of different transitions.



Low frequency electromagnetic radiations are emitted by electron oscillations, while visible light up to X ray is emitted by electronic transitions within atoms. Gamma rays are emitted by transitions within the atomic nucleus.



Moreover, radiation with energy comparable to UV and above is dangerous for living being, as it usually damages the organic molecules.






share|improve this answer





















  • 2





    Actually, "cold blooded" does not mean "in thermal equilibrium with the environment". It means "having poor thermoregulation". An alligator is obviously warmer than the environment, because it is alive, it has a metabolism, and as a consequence produces waste heat. In real life, the biggest thermal problem an alligator has is shedding waste heat when doing effort out of water; overheating is one of the main reasons why reptiles have very poor endurance. But yes, most electromagnetic energy emitted by the average animal is infrared black body radiation.

    – AlexP
    5 hours ago





















1














In order for a body to emit visible light as a result of black body radiation, that body has to be heated up to close to 620 degrees Celsius, or 1160 Fahrenheit. Think of light bulbs.



Your gators can only reach that temperature with human intervention involving fuel, and they won't be alive for most of the time they are that hot.



Fireflies emit visible light not through black body radiation, but as a result of luciferin reacting with luciferase in their bodies. It could take hundreds of millions of years for alligators to accumulate enough random mutations for that, but you could speed up the process with genetic engineering.






share|improve this answer
























  • Maybe hundreds of millions of years is an exaggeration because, "luciferases vary widely between different species, and consequently bioluminescence has arisen over forty times in evolutionary history." en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bioluminescence

    – chasly from UK
    17 mins ago





















0














No. Not in the way you are suggesting, and not to the frequencies and power that you are dreaming of.



However... you could go around your problem and have a symbiotic relationship with some light emitting animal (e.g. a firefly), or bioluminescent fungus, or bacterium (as in the case of a certain squid).



You would "only" need to create a selective pressure for the two organisms to cooperate. In the case of the squid, the cephalopod needs to camouflage by imitating the brightness of the sea surface, and the bacteria are just happy to be carried around. In the case of your alligator, the light could attract some nocturnal preys, or camouflage the alligator during full-moons. The bioluminescent animals could benefit from cleaning the dirty teeth of the alligator, or cleanse its skin from parasites and ticks, or simply enjoy being carried around for the sake of it.






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    3 Answers
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    3 Answers
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    No, it doesn't work that way.




    I select the ones that emit the highest frequency of radiation (since all living creatures emit thermal radiation)




    Black body radiation is emitted by anything above the temperature of 0 K. Alligators, being cold blooded animals, are just at the same temperature of their environment. There is no thing such a hotter or colder alligator, you would basically pick some based on the local environmental temperature (i.e. sunlight or shade).




    Is it possible, that at one point the frequency of that radiation becomes high enough to enter the visible light spectrum? Could we exceed the visible light spectrum? Maybe reach a point where the alligators start emitting X-Rays or Gamma Rays?




    Different wavelengths are emitted as a consequence of different transitions.



    Low frequency electromagnetic radiations are emitted by electron oscillations, while visible light up to X ray is emitted by electronic transitions within atoms. Gamma rays are emitted by transitions within the atomic nucleus.



    Moreover, radiation with energy comparable to UV and above is dangerous for living being, as it usually damages the organic molecules.






    share|improve this answer





















    • 2





      Actually, "cold blooded" does not mean "in thermal equilibrium with the environment". It means "having poor thermoregulation". An alligator is obviously warmer than the environment, because it is alive, it has a metabolism, and as a consequence produces waste heat. In real life, the biggest thermal problem an alligator has is shedding waste heat when doing effort out of water; overheating is one of the main reasons why reptiles have very poor endurance. But yes, most electromagnetic energy emitted by the average animal is infrared black body radiation.

      – AlexP
      5 hours ago


















    3














    No, it doesn't work that way.




    I select the ones that emit the highest frequency of radiation (since all living creatures emit thermal radiation)




    Black body radiation is emitted by anything above the temperature of 0 K. Alligators, being cold blooded animals, are just at the same temperature of their environment. There is no thing such a hotter or colder alligator, you would basically pick some based on the local environmental temperature (i.e. sunlight or shade).




    Is it possible, that at one point the frequency of that radiation becomes high enough to enter the visible light spectrum? Could we exceed the visible light spectrum? Maybe reach a point where the alligators start emitting X-Rays or Gamma Rays?




    Different wavelengths are emitted as a consequence of different transitions.



    Low frequency electromagnetic radiations are emitted by electron oscillations, while visible light up to X ray is emitted by electronic transitions within atoms. Gamma rays are emitted by transitions within the atomic nucleus.



    Moreover, radiation with energy comparable to UV and above is dangerous for living being, as it usually damages the organic molecules.






    share|improve this answer





















    • 2





      Actually, "cold blooded" does not mean "in thermal equilibrium with the environment". It means "having poor thermoregulation". An alligator is obviously warmer than the environment, because it is alive, it has a metabolism, and as a consequence produces waste heat. In real life, the biggest thermal problem an alligator has is shedding waste heat when doing effort out of water; overheating is one of the main reasons why reptiles have very poor endurance. But yes, most electromagnetic energy emitted by the average animal is infrared black body radiation.

      – AlexP
      5 hours ago
















    3












    3








    3







    No, it doesn't work that way.




    I select the ones that emit the highest frequency of radiation (since all living creatures emit thermal radiation)




    Black body radiation is emitted by anything above the temperature of 0 K. Alligators, being cold blooded animals, are just at the same temperature of their environment. There is no thing such a hotter or colder alligator, you would basically pick some based on the local environmental temperature (i.e. sunlight or shade).




    Is it possible, that at one point the frequency of that radiation becomes high enough to enter the visible light spectrum? Could we exceed the visible light spectrum? Maybe reach a point where the alligators start emitting X-Rays or Gamma Rays?




    Different wavelengths are emitted as a consequence of different transitions.



    Low frequency electromagnetic radiations are emitted by electron oscillations, while visible light up to X ray is emitted by electronic transitions within atoms. Gamma rays are emitted by transitions within the atomic nucleus.



    Moreover, radiation with energy comparable to UV and above is dangerous for living being, as it usually damages the organic molecules.






    share|improve this answer















    No, it doesn't work that way.




    I select the ones that emit the highest frequency of radiation (since all living creatures emit thermal radiation)




    Black body radiation is emitted by anything above the temperature of 0 K. Alligators, being cold blooded animals, are just at the same temperature of their environment. There is no thing such a hotter or colder alligator, you would basically pick some based on the local environmental temperature (i.e. sunlight or shade).




    Is it possible, that at one point the frequency of that radiation becomes high enough to enter the visible light spectrum? Could we exceed the visible light spectrum? Maybe reach a point where the alligators start emitting X-Rays or Gamma Rays?




    Different wavelengths are emitted as a consequence of different transitions.



    Low frequency electromagnetic radiations are emitted by electron oscillations, while visible light up to X ray is emitted by electronic transitions within atoms. Gamma rays are emitted by transitions within the atomic nucleus.



    Moreover, radiation with energy comparable to UV and above is dangerous for living being, as it usually damages the organic molecules.







    share|improve this answer














    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer








    edited 6 hours ago

























    answered 6 hours ago









    L.DutchL.Dutch

    79k26188386




    79k26188386








    • 2





      Actually, "cold blooded" does not mean "in thermal equilibrium with the environment". It means "having poor thermoregulation". An alligator is obviously warmer than the environment, because it is alive, it has a metabolism, and as a consequence produces waste heat. In real life, the biggest thermal problem an alligator has is shedding waste heat when doing effort out of water; overheating is one of the main reasons why reptiles have very poor endurance. But yes, most electromagnetic energy emitted by the average animal is infrared black body radiation.

      – AlexP
      5 hours ago
















    • 2





      Actually, "cold blooded" does not mean "in thermal equilibrium with the environment". It means "having poor thermoregulation". An alligator is obviously warmer than the environment, because it is alive, it has a metabolism, and as a consequence produces waste heat. In real life, the biggest thermal problem an alligator has is shedding waste heat when doing effort out of water; overheating is one of the main reasons why reptiles have very poor endurance. But yes, most electromagnetic energy emitted by the average animal is infrared black body radiation.

      – AlexP
      5 hours ago










    2




    2





    Actually, "cold blooded" does not mean "in thermal equilibrium with the environment". It means "having poor thermoregulation". An alligator is obviously warmer than the environment, because it is alive, it has a metabolism, and as a consequence produces waste heat. In real life, the biggest thermal problem an alligator has is shedding waste heat when doing effort out of water; overheating is one of the main reasons why reptiles have very poor endurance. But yes, most electromagnetic energy emitted by the average animal is infrared black body radiation.

    – AlexP
    5 hours ago







    Actually, "cold blooded" does not mean "in thermal equilibrium with the environment". It means "having poor thermoregulation". An alligator is obviously warmer than the environment, because it is alive, it has a metabolism, and as a consequence produces waste heat. In real life, the biggest thermal problem an alligator has is shedding waste heat when doing effort out of water; overheating is one of the main reasons why reptiles have very poor endurance. But yes, most electromagnetic energy emitted by the average animal is infrared black body radiation.

    – AlexP
    5 hours ago













    1














    In order for a body to emit visible light as a result of black body radiation, that body has to be heated up to close to 620 degrees Celsius, or 1160 Fahrenheit. Think of light bulbs.



    Your gators can only reach that temperature with human intervention involving fuel, and they won't be alive for most of the time they are that hot.



    Fireflies emit visible light not through black body radiation, but as a result of luciferin reacting with luciferase in their bodies. It could take hundreds of millions of years for alligators to accumulate enough random mutations for that, but you could speed up the process with genetic engineering.






    share|improve this answer
























    • Maybe hundreds of millions of years is an exaggeration because, "luciferases vary widely between different species, and consequently bioluminescence has arisen over forty times in evolutionary history." en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bioluminescence

      – chasly from UK
      17 mins ago


















    1














    In order for a body to emit visible light as a result of black body radiation, that body has to be heated up to close to 620 degrees Celsius, or 1160 Fahrenheit. Think of light bulbs.



    Your gators can only reach that temperature with human intervention involving fuel, and they won't be alive for most of the time they are that hot.



    Fireflies emit visible light not through black body radiation, but as a result of luciferin reacting with luciferase in their bodies. It could take hundreds of millions of years for alligators to accumulate enough random mutations for that, but you could speed up the process with genetic engineering.






    share|improve this answer
























    • Maybe hundreds of millions of years is an exaggeration because, "luciferases vary widely between different species, and consequently bioluminescence has arisen over forty times in evolutionary history." en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bioluminescence

      – chasly from UK
      17 mins ago
















    1












    1








    1







    In order for a body to emit visible light as a result of black body radiation, that body has to be heated up to close to 620 degrees Celsius, or 1160 Fahrenheit. Think of light bulbs.



    Your gators can only reach that temperature with human intervention involving fuel, and they won't be alive for most of the time they are that hot.



    Fireflies emit visible light not through black body radiation, but as a result of luciferin reacting with luciferase in their bodies. It could take hundreds of millions of years for alligators to accumulate enough random mutations for that, but you could speed up the process with genetic engineering.






    share|improve this answer













    In order for a body to emit visible light as a result of black body radiation, that body has to be heated up to close to 620 degrees Celsius, or 1160 Fahrenheit. Think of light bulbs.



    Your gators can only reach that temperature with human intervention involving fuel, and they won't be alive for most of the time they are that hot.



    Fireflies emit visible light not through black body radiation, but as a result of luciferin reacting with luciferase in their bodies. It could take hundreds of millions of years for alligators to accumulate enough random mutations for that, but you could speed up the process with genetic engineering.







    share|improve this answer












    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer










    answered 46 mins ago









    RenanRenan

    44.9k11102227




    44.9k11102227













    • Maybe hundreds of millions of years is an exaggeration because, "luciferases vary widely between different species, and consequently bioluminescence has arisen over forty times in evolutionary history." en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bioluminescence

      – chasly from UK
      17 mins ago





















    • Maybe hundreds of millions of years is an exaggeration because, "luciferases vary widely between different species, and consequently bioluminescence has arisen over forty times in evolutionary history." en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bioluminescence

      – chasly from UK
      17 mins ago



















    Maybe hundreds of millions of years is an exaggeration because, "luciferases vary widely between different species, and consequently bioluminescence has arisen over forty times in evolutionary history." en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bioluminescence

    – chasly from UK
    17 mins ago







    Maybe hundreds of millions of years is an exaggeration because, "luciferases vary widely between different species, and consequently bioluminescence has arisen over forty times in evolutionary history." en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bioluminescence

    – chasly from UK
    17 mins ago













    0














    No. Not in the way you are suggesting, and not to the frequencies and power that you are dreaming of.



    However... you could go around your problem and have a symbiotic relationship with some light emitting animal (e.g. a firefly), or bioluminescent fungus, or bacterium (as in the case of a certain squid).



    You would "only" need to create a selective pressure for the two organisms to cooperate. In the case of the squid, the cephalopod needs to camouflage by imitating the brightness of the sea surface, and the bacteria are just happy to be carried around. In the case of your alligator, the light could attract some nocturnal preys, or camouflage the alligator during full-moons. The bioluminescent animals could benefit from cleaning the dirty teeth of the alligator, or cleanse its skin from parasites and ticks, or simply enjoy being carried around for the sake of it.






    share|improve this answer




























      0














      No. Not in the way you are suggesting, and not to the frequencies and power that you are dreaming of.



      However... you could go around your problem and have a symbiotic relationship with some light emitting animal (e.g. a firefly), or bioluminescent fungus, or bacterium (as in the case of a certain squid).



      You would "only" need to create a selective pressure for the two organisms to cooperate. In the case of the squid, the cephalopod needs to camouflage by imitating the brightness of the sea surface, and the bacteria are just happy to be carried around. In the case of your alligator, the light could attract some nocturnal preys, or camouflage the alligator during full-moons. The bioluminescent animals could benefit from cleaning the dirty teeth of the alligator, or cleanse its skin from parasites and ticks, or simply enjoy being carried around for the sake of it.






      share|improve this answer


























        0












        0








        0







        No. Not in the way you are suggesting, and not to the frequencies and power that you are dreaming of.



        However... you could go around your problem and have a symbiotic relationship with some light emitting animal (e.g. a firefly), or bioluminescent fungus, or bacterium (as in the case of a certain squid).



        You would "only" need to create a selective pressure for the two organisms to cooperate. In the case of the squid, the cephalopod needs to camouflage by imitating the brightness of the sea surface, and the bacteria are just happy to be carried around. In the case of your alligator, the light could attract some nocturnal preys, or camouflage the alligator during full-moons. The bioluminescent animals could benefit from cleaning the dirty teeth of the alligator, or cleanse its skin from parasites and ticks, or simply enjoy being carried around for the sake of it.






        share|improve this answer













        No. Not in the way you are suggesting, and not to the frequencies and power that you are dreaming of.



        However... you could go around your problem and have a symbiotic relationship with some light emitting animal (e.g. a firefly), or bioluminescent fungus, or bacterium (as in the case of a certain squid).



        You would "only" need to create a selective pressure for the two organisms to cooperate. In the case of the squid, the cephalopod needs to camouflage by imitating the brightness of the sea surface, and the bacteria are just happy to be carried around. In the case of your alligator, the light could attract some nocturnal preys, or camouflage the alligator during full-moons. The bioluminescent animals could benefit from cleaning the dirty teeth of the alligator, or cleanse its skin from parasites and ticks, or simply enjoy being carried around for the sake of it.







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered 20 mins ago









        NofPNofP

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