06/18/2026
Wow!
A parrotfish does not just fall asleep.
It tucks itself into a see-through slime bubble and lets biology handle security.
The real detail is how much effort goes into bedtime.
Some parrotfish spend up to an hour making this mucus cocoon, sealing themselves inside before the reef’s night shift gets busy.
Moray eels hunt by scent, parasites come looking for blood, and the sleeping fish is basically off duty with no cleaner fish around to help.
So it builds its own little force field.
Researchers found these cocoons can act like mosquito nets against gnathiid isopods, tiny blood-sucking crustaceans that attack fish while they rest.
It is weird, a little gross, and surprisingly elegant.
By morning, the bubble is gone and the parrotfish swims off like nothing happened.
Sometimes survival is just knowing when to bring your own blanket.