The world's most poisonous fish can survive 24 hours on earth

Although charming and soothing to humans, the ocean can be a very dangerous place where evolution has involved all its finest specimens. There are fish that can swim faster than our cars, creatures larger than our furniture, but also creatures whose poison [...]
There are fish that can swim faster than our cars, larger creatures than our furniture, but also whose venom can kill an adult in seconds.
Fish that live in coastal areas of Indo-Calesor, but along the coast of Florida and the Caribbean, are officially the most toxic creatures on the sea. It's a stone fish or Sydney, which is obviously deadly to humans and kills with extremely powerful poison.
Not only are they toxic, they can also survive on earth
These fish have large spotted feathers on the back, with a total of 13 missiles containing very strong poison. But how do you know people closely? Scientists explain that the stone fish has one of the best camouflages in the world to which it was appointed. It does not attack people, but it is passive, and the danger arises when a person steps on it thinking it's a rock.
In fact, there is little chance that a person during contact with this type of fish will pass safely, and more often the loss of one's leg occurs. But if a larger area is contaminated and a greater amount of this neurotoxin enters the human body, death without an antidote will happen almost immediately, writes Grunge.
Contact with poison causes bleeding, tissue changes color because of lack of oxygen, and then vomiting, dizziness, delirium and finally cardiac arrest. In contact with stone fish, there is no use of traditional medicine and it is a safe way to die. Urgent transportation to the hospital is most likely. Interestingly, these fish can survive more than 24 hours on earth, and the second most frequent use of Australia's stone antidot is enough to show the number of incidents with this fatal creature.
Besides fish of stone, the sea abounds in other poisonous creatures, so while humans fear sharks and other predators, the real danger is more often unknown.












