Looks like someone can't wait for 2013 to begin.
Sunday, 30 December 2012
Friday, 28 December 2012
Is Faeces Brain Food?
He stood before the crowd with all the casual self-assurance and authority of a good-natured boss sharing a drink with his subordinates. In his hand was a small, brown ball.
"This is poo" he said as he playfully threw the brown ball into the air and caught it, a smile playing on his lips as the crowd chuckled in just the way he knew they would.
Holding the small, brown ball in his thumb and finger for all to see, he went on "and what I want to do today is share my passion for poo with you."
But for one member of the audience, it would never matter how interesting or amusing his talk would be...
"Passion?" said the Dung Beetle. "You call that passion?"
"This is poo" he said as he playfully threw the brown ball into the air and caught it, a smile playing on his lips as the crowd chuckled in just the way he knew they would.
Holding the small, brown ball in his thumb and finger for all to see, he went on "and what I want to do today is share my passion for poo with you."
But for one member of the audience, it would never matter how interesting or amusing his talk would be...
"Passion?" said the Dung Beetle. "You call that passion?"
Wednesday, 26 December 2012
Sunday, 23 December 2012
Merry Christmas!
Merry Christmas everyone! I hope you have a wonderful day and Santa fills your stocking with so much cool stuff that you would feel guilty were you not having so much FUN!
Santa is looking particularly trim this year, don't you think?
Image: modified from PacificKlaus via Flickr |
Friday, 21 December 2012
Christmas Cactus?
Wednesday, 19 December 2012
Joubin's Squid
Sunday, 16 December 2012
Ostracod
Image: Daniel Stoupin |
Friday, 14 December 2012
Hydnora africana
It's Hydnora africana! A kind of "living dead" plant. Because sometimes you just don't know what's under the earth until it breaks out and stinks the place up.
Wednesday, 12 December 2012
Diplura
Sunday, 9 December 2012
Remora
Image: mentalblock_DMD via Flickr Remora remora |
Well have no fear! The Remora is here to show you the opportunities granted to you by your horrific, cranial abnormality! Turn the cruelty of nature to your advantage!
Friday, 7 December 2012
Alien Brain Starfish?
Image: NOAA Okeanos Explorer Program, Galapagos Rift Expedition 2011 |
It's clearly a brain. A brain unleashed from the dark tedium of a cranium and enjoying its time in the slightly less dark and tedious deep sea. Can't you see it throbbing and pulsating in delight of all the new sensations? It's like a dog with its head out the car window. Especially the tongue. It looks a lot like the dog's tongue.
I wonder what it'll do with all those spinal columns?
Wednesday, 5 December 2012
Jumping Jesus! It's the Pygmy Mole Cricket!
Image: Malcolm Burrows Pygmy Mole Cricket Actually a grasshopper. |
So what's a Pygmy Mole Cricket to do? They can't walk on water. They can't swim through water. They can jump really well on land, but what about on water? They can't do that, can they?
Sunday, 2 December 2012
Darwin's Frog
Image: Wikipedia Rhinoderma darwinii |
Friday, 30 November 2012
White Coral
Wednesday, 28 November 2012
Uropyia meticulodina. Best camouflage, ever.
Image: Bettaman via Flickr Uropyia meticulodina |
Sunday, 25 November 2012
Flying Gurnard
Image: laszlo-photo via Flickr |
Friday, 23 November 2012
Anchor Worm, Lernaeolophus
Wednesday, 21 November 2012
Cauliflower Jellyfish, Cephea
Image: Derek Keats via Flickr |
Sunday, 18 November 2012
Sea Elephant
Friday, 16 November 2012
The Leggy Blonde Is So Weird!
Image: Paul Marek et al. Illacme plenipes |
Wednesday, 14 November 2012
King Ragworm
Image: Alexander Semenov Alitta virens / Nereis virens |
Sunday, 11 November 2012
Friday, 9 November 2012
Prickly Dogfish
Image: New Zealand-American Submarine Ring of Fire 2005 Exploration, NOAA Vents Program Oxynotus bruniensis |
We don't normally think of them as triangles.
Wednesday, 7 November 2012
Harp Sponge
Sunday, 4 November 2012
Marine Iguana
Image: lgooch via Flickr Amblyrhynchus cristatus |
Friday, 2 November 2012
Cyclosa and the Bridge of the Dead
Image: opencage.info |
Wednesday, 31 October 2012
Happy Halloween!
Wishing you all a chocolate covered day! And a rich, caramel filled night.
Or at least something better than dead fish in the dark.
Sunday, 28 October 2012
Return of the Hallowe'en Horrors
It's Hallowe'en! That time of year when we play snakes 'n' ladders with death, peek-a-boo with darkness and rock, paper, Armageddon with evil. Fun!
Behold Death. He's stripped to the waist to show off his brand new array of internal organs. He looks great! At least 3 or 4,000 years younger! The surgeon says he can choose some skin in a few weeks, maybe even an eyeball!
Here be Darkness. Her flower arranging has really come on leaps and bounds this year. She's taken a very important step and decided not to paint all the flowers entirely black. We now have one crimson petal peeking out from the shadows. She says it's a revelation!
Yonder is Evil. He's dressed up in a long, white robe with a little cardboard halo fixed onto his head by a piece of wire. He does that every year but it's hilarious every time!
But some creatures don't need to dress up in a long, white robe to be scary. They don't need clothes at all. They're entirely NAKED! All the time! Let's go see!
Behold Death. He's stripped to the waist to show off his brand new array of internal organs. He looks great! At least 3 or 4,000 years younger! The surgeon says he can choose some skin in a few weeks, maybe even an eyeball!
Here be Darkness. Her flower arranging has really come on leaps and bounds this year. She's taken a very important step and decided not to paint all the flowers entirely black. We now have one crimson petal peeking out from the shadows. She says it's a revelation!
Yonder is Evil. He's dressed up in a long, white robe with a little cardboard halo fixed onto his head by a piece of wire. He does that every year but it's hilarious every time!
But some creatures don't need to dress up in a long, white robe to be scary. They don't need clothes at all. They're entirely NAKED! All the time! Let's go see!
Labels:
bird,
bony fish,
crustacean,
echinoderm,
fungus,
insect,
mammal,
multi monster,
plant
Friday, 26 October 2012
Wolbachia
Three Wolbachia within an insect cell. They each have a white ring around them.
It ain't no halo.
Long before Count Dracula was stalking the night, knocking on the bedroom window and introducing young Victorians to the secret urges that emerge when you forget to take your hourly cold shower, there was Wolbachia.
Wednesday, 24 October 2012
Sunday, 21 October 2012
Hellbender
Image: Ken Roblee/New York Department of Environmental Conservation Cryptobranchus alleganiensis |
Friday, 19 October 2012
Melted Marshmallow Sponge
Image: neptunecanada via Flickr |
Isn't it strange?
You go to the cold, dark depths of the sea
and it turns out you just missed a camp fire.
Wednesday, 17 October 2012
Veiled Lady
Image: Shashidhara halady |
Sunday, 14 October 2012
How does a scorpion eat a lion?
With difficulty!
Oh, and by adding 'fish' at the end.
You know how it is. You're peacefully walking along a quiet road, minding your own business, the imaginary bodycount reaching apocalyptic proportions as you indulge in various fantasies... the usual thing. When you come across a gigantic rock in the street.
It barely registers as you blithely walk past. Who cares about a massive boulder in real life when you're flying around with laser eyes and that guy who stole your sweets when you were 10 years old is begging for his life in your imagination.
And then, just as your imaginary laser eyes are about to carefully remove yet another limb, the giant rock comes to life and eats you.
I have no idea how it deals with the Lionfish's poisonous spines!
"Strange", you say to yourself as you're swallowed whole. You realise that you should have paid a lot more attention to that peculiar rock in the road.
Since you are no longer able to in real life, your imaginary self slaps itself on the forehead and sighs heavily.
Oh, and by adding 'fish' at the end.
You know how it is. You're peacefully walking along a quiet road, minding your own business, the imaginary bodycount reaching apocalyptic proportions as you indulge in various fantasies... the usual thing. When you come across a gigantic rock in the street.
It barely registers as you blithely walk past. Who cares about a massive boulder in real life when you're flying around with laser eyes and that guy who stole your sweets when you were 10 years old is begging for his life in your imagination.
And then, just as your imaginary laser eyes are about to carefully remove yet another limb, the giant rock comes to life and eats you.
I have no idea how it deals with the Lionfish's poisonous spines!
"Strange", you say to yourself as you're swallowed whole. You realise that you should have paid a lot more attention to that peculiar rock in the road.
Since you are no longer able to in real life, your imaginary self slaps itself on the forehead and sighs heavily.
Friday, 12 October 2012
Wrong again, Sea Cucumber
Image: neptunecanada via Flickr |
Wednesday, 10 October 2012
Alligator Snapping Turtle
Image: USFWS/Southeast via Flickr Macrochelys temminckii |
Sunday, 7 October 2012
Friday, 5 October 2012
Wednesday, 3 October 2012
REVIEW: The Book of Barely Imagined Beings
"Death is not the end, it's just a case of being metabolically different."
Caspar Henderson
Fantastic! The Book of Barely Imagined Beings is A 21st Century Bestiary that uses an A to Z of animals to explore a whole range of scientific and human issues.
If nothing else, the book is a clear demonstration that its author, Caspar Henderson, is a right, ol' clever clogs. Each chapter brings together an array of quotes, history, art, science, mythology and story to bring the subject alive. It's amazing to see how our thoughts and ideas surrounding life on earth have changed over time, let alone how much life itself has changed over significantly more time.
Each chapter focuses on a single creature, including many of our old fiends like the Axolotl, the Sea Butterfly and even Venus' Girdle! A girdle so sexy and sheer that barely anyone knows it's even there!
Each animal teaches us something about earth, life and our place within it. Where we came from and what we should do now that we have all this ridiculous world-changing power. It seems to me that this really is a time for thought; our accidents and unintended consequences are not like your grandfather's. With power comes responsibility, and with responsibility comes having an idea of what the hell it is you're doing.
Each chapter is also introduced with a beautiful illustration by an Iranian artist called Golbanou Moghaddas. His earthy, organic art sums up the chapter in a way that raises quite a few questions. What on earth does the Crown of Thorns Starfish have to do with van Gogh's Sunflowers and the Pyramids of Giza? You'll have to read it to find out!
The Book of Barely Imagined Beings is out now in the UK
The rest of the world will get it a little later, so Americans can feel what it's like to have to wait for Hollywood movies.
Also check out Caspar's blog.
Caspar Henderson
Fantastic! The Book of Barely Imagined Beings is A 21st Century Bestiary that uses an A to Z of animals to explore a whole range of scientific and human issues.
If nothing else, the book is a clear demonstration that its author, Caspar Henderson, is a right, ol' clever clogs. Each chapter brings together an array of quotes, history, art, science, mythology and story to bring the subject alive. It's amazing to see how our thoughts and ideas surrounding life on earth have changed over time, let alone how much life itself has changed over significantly more time.
Each chapter focuses on a single creature, including many of our old fiends like the Axolotl, the Sea Butterfly and even Venus' Girdle! A girdle so sexy and sheer that barely anyone knows it's even there!
Each animal teaches us something about earth, life and our place within it. Where we came from and what we should do now that we have all this ridiculous world-changing power. It seems to me that this really is a time for thought; our accidents and unintended consequences are not like your grandfather's. With power comes responsibility, and with responsibility comes having an idea of what the hell it is you're doing.
Each chapter is also introduced with a beautiful illustration by an Iranian artist called Golbanou Moghaddas. His earthy, organic art sums up the chapter in a way that raises quite a few questions. What on earth does the Crown of Thorns Starfish have to do with van Gogh's Sunflowers and the Pyramids of Giza? You'll have to read it to find out!
The Book of Barely Imagined Beings is out now in the UK
The rest of the world will get it a little later, so Americans can feel what it's like to have to wait for Hollywood movies.
Also check out Caspar's blog.
Sunday, 30 September 2012
Sea Robin
Image: EricksonSmith via Flickr Striped Sea Robin Are those legs? They look like legs! |
Friday, 28 September 2012
Thursday, 27 September 2012
Vampire Squid Feeds on Filth!
Image: Richard E. Young That's a mouth, that is |
The diet of this deep sea cephalopod has long been a mystery. Other squid, octopus and cuttlefish are predators of fish and crustaceans, but the Vampire Squid has always been perfectly comfortable being utterly unique.
They use their flabby body and slothful ways to survive in the incredibly low oxygen levels found at depths of 900 m (3,000 ft). Now, Henk-Jan Hoving and Bruce Robison from MBARI have discovered how they can eat without having to do all that tedious "moving" which we all find so exhausting.
Along with their 8 arms, Vampire Squid have a pair of thin, thread-like filaments that can be up to 8 times longer than their 30 cm (1 ft) body. Extending one of these out into the water, they allow it to get covered in the slowly descending precipitation of dead bodies, faeces and general muck known as marine snow.
Once covered in this unsavoury nastiness, the Vampire Squid draws the filament back in, uses mucus secreted by its suckers to bundle up the filth into a bite-sized morsel, and then eats it.
Basically, they're like Sea Cucumbers, except they don't eat it off the floor.
Finally! Now that you know their terrible defect and that they're not just a perfect bundle of gelatinous lovely, you can TRULY love them!
Wednesday, 26 September 2012
Killing you softly. And slowly. And horribly.
So they got one of those tiny cameras that are making our lives a living, near-future nightmare, put it in a mussel and then had us all watch it watch itself get brutally consumed by a starfish.
Pretty darn sick. And a grim example of the horrors that lie beyond our limited scope. The horrors that are too slow, too fast or too small for us to grasp. Let alone the horrors we don't yet even recognise as horrors! 'Tis all horror! Horror all the way down!
Of course, we all know that some molluscs turn the tables on even the most vicious of starfish. Your death will be avenged! Slowly.
Pretty darn sick. And a grim example of the horrors that lie beyond our limited scope. The horrors that are too slow, too fast or too small for us to grasp. Let alone the horrors we don't yet even recognise as horrors! 'Tis all horror! Horror all the way down!
Of course, we all know that some molluscs turn the tables on even the most vicious of starfish. Your death will be avenged! Slowly.
Sunday, 23 September 2012
Friday, 21 September 2012
Wednesday, 19 September 2012
Sunday, 16 September 2012
Snailfish
Friday, 14 September 2012
Dominos
Image: Wikipedia Therea petiveriana |
Wednesday, 12 September 2012
Sunday, 9 September 2012
Mushrooms From Hell: Stinkhorns
Image: eyeweed via Flickr Aseroë rubra |
Friday, 7 September 2012
Wednesday, 5 September 2012
Green Bomber
Image: Casey Dunn |
Sunday, 2 September 2012
Pyrosome
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