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In my world I find it simplest to have iron-based blood. The problem is that iron-based blood is red, and I want it to be black. Two things come to mind; one is making the blood denser, resulting in thicker, darker blood and fast bleeders. The other is making blood richer in iron, which leads to black blood, but the threat of heavy metal poisoning. I am not a expert so I don't know if those would even work. What can I do to make iron-based blood black, and what would the effects be on creatures' bodies?

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  • $\begingroup$ What do you mean when you say that iron-based blood is simplest? There are almost undoubtedly iron-based biochemistries that would be black or near-black, but they'd still be pretty different from the existing human biochemistry. $\endgroup$
    – Saidoro
    Commented Oct 26, 2015 at 19:05
  • $\begingroup$ Iron based blood is simplest to use in general for a worldbuilder because I can use information from Earth based life and not use theories. $\endgroup$
    – TrEs-2b
    Commented Oct 26, 2015 at 19:07
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    $\begingroup$ Black blood is mentioned here: worldbuilding.stackexchange.com/questions/28276/… $\endgroup$
    – zeta
    Commented Oct 26, 2015 at 20:09
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    $\begingroup$ It is but this question asks it to remain iron based while that question asks about other metals $\endgroup$
    – TrEs-2b
    Commented Oct 26, 2015 at 20:16
  • $\begingroup$ I would suggest that increasing blood's opacity may prove effective. A lot of blood clumped together is pretty dark, if you can get it completely opaque it would be that dark all the time. Not sure how to accomplish that though, hopefully this will give someone else an idea. $\endgroup$ Commented Oct 26, 2015 at 20:25

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Blood is More Than Red Blood Cells

If you look at the things required for a complete blood count, you're going to notice that there are things which are not red blood cells but are still "blood".

Simply introduce impurities into blood that change its color. As DoubleDouble has mentioned, a variety of skink has green blood because of toxins inside it.

Some Alternatives

Alternatively, this creature can simply have poorly functioning liver and kidneys, and the blackness comes from improperly broken-down red blood cells. Often in animals, black blood is simply old blood, or blood that has degraded and not been able to be filtered out. (See here, a site which focuses on women's health issues.)

Perhaps your creatures have evolved to have black blood, as it confers some advantage to them. Some advantages could be:

  • wounds do not appear as brightly, so an injured individual can better hide and recover. This would require a species to be wounded enough that this actually becomes a factor in its evolution.
  • Black blood a sign of health and a factor in sexual selection, because a healthy black-blood critter has the extra energy to make the blood black. Your creatures would need some way of displaying the blackness of their blood without sacrificing too much of it. Perhaps some area of the body that has thin or clear skin?
  • The black comes from a molecule which eliminates free radicals, or some other function that "would be nice to have" which current blood does not. Perhaps it is an anti-cancer measure, because your black-blooded critters get exposed to a lot of sun/radiation. Sadly, I think it impractical to list all the molecules which can turn black when oxidized, but it can happen.
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    $\begingroup$ And horseshoe crabs have blue blood. $\endgroup$ Commented Jan 2, 2016 at 16:57
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    $\begingroup$ Thought of this in context of "melanin and ionizing radiation" question. worldbuilding.stackexchange.com/questions/74045/… High melanin content could definitely turn blood black and would fit the third bullet point in the above answer. $\endgroup$
    – Willk
    Commented Mar 15, 2017 at 14:14
  • $\begingroup$ @Willk Came here to mention about melanin but you got here before me! $\endgroup$ Commented Jan 21, 2019 at 11:56
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If you just want black blood because it would be cool ( and it would) have the blood become denser due to a much higher need for coagulation to stop bleeding.

You could also have a "black" blood cells that replaced the white blood cells in terms of what the white cells ( more info here: https://www.urmc.rochester.edu/encyclopedia/content.aspx?ContentTypeID=160&ContentID=35) do. It could be do to a disease factor as We (and I'm using the royal we) have cured all the diseases out there so evolution tried a survival of the fittest out and gave us a new disease (think Black Death) and our blood evolved to have stronger "white" blood cells that turned darker, causing the red iron blood to turn black. our scientists are not sure why yet but are working very hard find out.

Due to that fact, doctors can now tell immune-compromised children by how dark the blood is.

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The color of your blood is related to the amount of oxygen attached to red blood cells.The lower the level of oxygen in the blood, the darker it gets. This offers a few options.

  • Venous blood (what you normally see after a cut) is darker, and therefore carrying less oxygen, while arterial blood is brighter, carrying more oxygen. An evolutionary mechanism of some sort, may have developed allowing for the surrounding tissue (skin, muscle, etc.) to require less oxygen.

  • Hemoglobin. Red blood cells that are darker in color, can be a result of hyperchromia, due to increased hemoglobin.

  • Both. A higher presence of hemoglobin, along with less oxygen being carried to the tissue, would present a darker coloration ... and deeper wounds would probably make for an interesting visual.

Blood doesn't have to be red. As others have stated, there are other colors that can occur in a creatures blood.

  • Spiders, crustaceans, octopi, squid and some mollusks have blue blood. This is due to hemocyanin in the blood, rather than hemoglobin. It is colorless when deoxygenated, and blue when oxygenated. Unlike hemoglobin, hemocyanin floats freely through the blood, while hemoglobin attaches to red blood cells.

  • Some segmented worms, some leeches, some marine worms (and apparently a certain skink, but for different reasons) have green blood. Chlorocruorin is chemically similar to hemoglobin, and some species even have both chlorocurorin and hemoglobin. It appears light green when deoxygenated, and green when oxygenated. When it is more concentrated, it can appear as light red.

  • Marine worms, peanut worms, penis worms and brachiopods have violet blood. Haemorythrin is responsible for the coloration, and is only about 1/4 as efficient as hemoglobin when it comes to transporting oxygen. Colorless when deoxygenated, and a violet-pink when oxygenated.

Chemistry Color of Blood Blood's Rainbow

Slideshare: Blood Physiology

Copper ... This is something of a shot in the dark, but ...
Copper is involved in the process of creating new red blood cells, manufacturing collagen, healing wounds, and maintaining sheathes around nerves. Something that produces enough copper, either through the natural processes of the body, or through ingestion of copper rich foods and has developed a tolerance to much higher levels of copper in the body, it could be argued that would result in greater levels of red blood cells, allowing of lower quantities of oxygen to be carried by more cells, to where they need. I would imagine hyperchromia taking place as a result of increased hemoglobin attaching to a greater number of red blood cells.

Another option would be the presence of a second protein molecule to work alongside hemoglobin, but unfortunately the readily available example of Hemoglobin + Chlorocruorin would produce something closer to yellow, rather than black. Like when smashing some cockroaches.

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Their blood needs to be iron based, but it doesn't need to be exactly the same as real human blood. You could include some kind of cell in the blood, a cell that we don't have, that causes it to turn black on contact with air or with colder temperatures. If you want it to be black all the time, (and I don't pretend to be an expert on this) you could try swapping out the hemoglobins (the protein that makes red blood cells iron based and red) for a different protein with a black pigment, but still an iron base.

Since all of my experience with in depth stuff like this and even with the word "hemoglobin" comes from Wikipedia this morning, don't take my word for this. It would probably not work.

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In the Pern books (McCaffery, Anne), dragons and other beings have black blood due to Boron. Not sure of the science behind it. Fans of her books most likely will attribute using Boron as the reason as copying. If there are scientific reasons, then use it.

On the other hand, I have hemochromotosis which results in high levels of iron. I haven't seen any change in colour when my iron levels are too high. The treatment is withdrawing blood so extra is made to dilute my iron rich life blood. From this experience, I advise NOT explaining black blood being due to excessive iron.

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  • $\begingroup$ Welcome to Worldbuilding.SE! We're glad you could join us! When you have a moment, please click here to learn more about our culture and take our tour. This was excellent insight! $\endgroup$
    – JBH
    Commented Jan 20, 2019 at 6:45
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Melanism is a genectic condition in animals that causes it to make melanin, the pigment in black skin and hair, in every cell within its body, including it's blood. If the expression is strong enough, even the blood can appear black.

One real life example is a breed of chicken from Indonesia: the feathers, skin, meat, bone and even eggs were black, and the chicken's blood is a very dark red due to the melanine content.

If your critter is sexually selected to look black, melanism can arise from genetics and spread out throughout the population, with the unplanned consequence of staining the critter's blood completely black, due to the strength of melanin gene expression.

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Add a gas to the atmosphere

If it is just a REASON for it to be black so you can change the colour and keep your "Earth based life" data can you just add a gas to the atmosphere of your new world that reacts to the iron in the blood, as the lungs would include it in the oxygenation process. If the only effect of the gas was to change the blood from red to black it would not effect your "Earth based life" programming data.

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  • $\begingroup$ user17347, can you elaborate? Are you talking about a particular chemical compound that the gas added to your atmosphere makes or something else? $\endgroup$
    – Jim2B
    Commented Jan 23, 2016 at 4:03
  • $\begingroup$ No not really just a idea based on chemical reactions no real knowledge in that area sorry. $\endgroup$
    – user17347
    Commented Jan 23, 2016 at 12:14
  • $\begingroup$ If the body of your creatures use chlorine in some fashion of resperation, then FeCl3*6H2O could create a black coloration. And depending on hydrate state, could cause it to turn yellow. If you use Cl in respiration function some way to supplement O2, then there is a chemical chain to swap between Fe2O4, and other iron oxide stated to carry oxygen. Now, this would be poisonous to normal earth life, but your creatures could have adapted to it. $\endgroup$
    – Sonvar
    Commented Apr 1, 2019 at 23:41
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Pigmented blood Platelets.

Platelets in your blood are not exactly functional cells, but rather a selection of cell fragments that serve as clogs/scaffolding to enable fibrin formation,thus forming clots.

Normally platelets are quite transparent, having a vaguely straw-colored appearance. But as they are not functional elements of the blood, there is virtually no reason they could not be strongly pigmented.

This would make blood somewhat darker, and clotted blood MUCH darker.

As you are altering a blood component that is always present, very structurally simple and very non-active under normal circumstances, you can get away with fiddling with it much more easily than playing with "live", active cells that have very complex interactions.

If you need to have a believable doubletalk for it, say that the creature has a lot of melanin in the skin.scales/whatever, and the platelets are a convenient transport medium for the material in the bloodstream, both for deposition and disposal. The only disadvantage would be the slightly increased energy requirements for the creature to manufacture so much Melanin., and if there is an established survival reason why it needs a lot of pigment, then that serves as a more than ample reason or excuse.

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