Colors of Alien Blood: Oxygenation Chemistry Explained

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The discussion centers on determining the possible blood colors for an oxygen-breathing alien character in a story. The conversation highlights that blood color is often linked to the chemical used for oxygen transport, with hemoglobin in humans being a prime example. Various elements, such as copper, can also bind with oxygen, potentially leading to different colors, like green. The participants explore the diversity of blood colors found in nature, noting that some organisms have unique blood colors, such as violet in penis worms. The efficiency of oxygen transport is emphasized, especially for a highly intelligent alien with significant energy needs. Alternatives to colored blood, such as milky substances like Fluosol, are mentioned, suggesting that blood doesn't necessarily have to be colored to function effectively. The conversation also touches on whether the alien must bleed at all, proposing that other physiological responses could convey emotions or states without traditional bleeding.
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I have an alien in one of my stories that bleeds. I want to use science to determine what the range of possible colors would be. It's an oxygen breathing alien, so it's blood has to be efficient at transporting it. I know our blood is red because we use iron to do that. I don't know enough about the chemistry of how oxygenation works to come up with any guesses for anything else.

First off: What other atoms or molecules can bind so easily with oxygen? I know copper reacts with oxygen to turn green, how easy is that process compared to iron?
 
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Why do you suppose the same chemical that carries oxygen has to be the one that causes the color?
 
Vanadium 50 said:
Why do you suppose the same chemical that carries oxygen has to be the one that causes the color?
One obvious reason: hemoglobin does both. Another: a chemical that carries oxygen is needed in large amounts. If it has colour, it would prevail over other coloured compounds in blood.
 
Here's a handy guide for different blood colours that occur in nature:

The-Chemistry-of-Blood-Colours-v2.png
 
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I had no idea that Earth life had that kind of diversity in their blood. I thought most blood was mostly clear. I'm going to have to look through them and see what's most efficient. This creature is highly intelligent, and therefore has a huge energy requirements.
 
snorkack said:
Another: a chemical that carries oxygen is needed in large amounts. If it has colour, it would prevail over other coloured compounds in blood.

But it doesn't have to be colored. Fluosol, for example, is kind of milky, and works just fine as blood. Mix that with something orange, and presto! Orange blood. Or chartreuse. Or mauve. Or...
 
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Ryan_m_b said:
Here's a handy guide for different blood colours that occur in nature:

View attachment 189536
Penis worms have violet blood, neat.
 
I seen someone or something's blood orange?
 
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newjerseyrunner said:
I have an alien in one of my stories that bleeds. I want to use science to determine what the range of possible colors would be.
Why must he bleed? If he is not made to bleed, then you can stop worrying about what kind of blood has has and its color.
 
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  • #11
symbolipoint said:
Why must he bleed? If he is not made to bleed, then you can stop worrying about what kind of blood has has and its color.
Maybe the alien gets bloodshots eyes when he is over tired, or gets embarassed quite easily( assume he has a similar response to this as humans ). His blood color could show through somehow, even if he does not bleed.
 
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@256bits, post #11 is clever. I would also wonder: Does the animal need to be like Mammal, or may it be some other taxonomic category? Only the author ( @newjerseyrunner ) would know this.

edit add: I say this since a different taxonomic category could be important in what kind of blood the animal uses.
 
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