Image: Saspotato |
You can't put a price on genuine joy and pleasure derived from a much-loved gift, but next time maybe you could get him a piece of astro turf with a hole in it rather than an entire golf course. You live and learn.
Image: Sylke Rohrlach Horned Blenny, Parablennius intermedius |
Most of them are quite small; the Horned Blenny here comes from Australia and reaches 12 cm (4.7 in) long. Normally you wouldn't realise that, though. Normally you'd just see its head.
Image: richard ling Leopard Blenny, Exallias brevis |
The Leopard Blenny gets its name from being spotty like a leopard, not for it's unyielding lion heart forged from iron and steel.
Image: Saspotato Tasmanian Blenny, Parablennius tasmanianus |
Image: mentalblock_DMD Seaweed Blenny, Parablennius marmoreus |
Or perhaps they just have a really huge sniffer on top of their head.
Image: PacificKlaus Blue-dashed Rockskipper, Blenniella periophthalmus |
Bicolor Blenny, Ecsenius bicolor
Eventually however, they must eat. Such is the suffering inflicted upon us by the body. Our plucky Blenny must leave the sanctity of his hole in the ground and forage for food. They will typically swim from rock to rock, stopping and looking around each time. That's why a lot of them are known as Rockskippers.
Lawnmower Blenny, Salarias fasciatus
Blennies feast on all sorts of small crustaceans and molluscs that can be found near their home grounds. Some, like the Lawnmower Blenny, are also very fond of algae that they'll graze off rocks. Or glass, depending on their situation. Still others prefer to catch plankton as it drifts by.
Image: Nick Hobgood Blue-lined Sabretooth Blenny, Plagiotremus rhinorhynchos |
Combtooth Blennies get their name from their single row of tiny, comb-like teeth in each jaw. Sabretooths also have a pair of long canines on the lower jaw, sometimes attached to a venom gland.
Many of these most bestial of Blennies use their fangs to rip out chunks of flesh, skin or fin from larger fish. There's even one that mimics cleaner fish, acting as if it's about to nibble on the parasites of their patron. Once their victim relaxes for a good going over, the Sabretooth tears out a mouthful of flesh to eat instead.
Image: PacificKlaus Star Blenny, Salarias ramosus |
Dominar Rygel XVI |
5 comments:
most are really cute! now the tearing out of flesh, however...
I was going to comment on how reminiscient the Rockhopper is of a frog (a psychadelic, probably-poisonous frog), but now I just need to cover this post in gold stars for including Rygel! (And that certainly would explain a lot...)
@TexWisGirl: Yes, mouthfuls of flesh tend to be a bit of a downer...
@Lunatiq Coquette: Gold stars! Woo!
I miss Farscape. Maybe I should buy a blenny?
Maybe you should! And then you can save up and eventually you'll be able to take him up to the stars when space tourism really takes off.
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