What on Earth? Is
this what passes for spines these days? Someone's really let themselves go...
Spikes! That's like, the whole Sea Urchin
thing. Spiny spikes and spiky spines. Sharp. Dangerous. Sea Urchins have
I will hurt you written all over them, from head to... All over them, anyway.
So the Slate Pencil Urchin with its rich covering of blunt clubs is a bit of an oddity. Their spines are not so much pencils as well-worn crayons. They may even be suitable for children aged 4 and over.
These peculiar echinoderms are found throughout the Indo-Pacific but are most common in Hawaii. That's also where they're at their most RED.
Elsewhere they can end up more brown in colour.
If you do find a vibrantly red one, it can look something like a devilish ball of molten lava some 25 cm (10 in) across. Assuming Hell really doesn't freeze over, this is probably what snow looks like there.
|
Image: Silke Baron
Their skin looks like a Hellish landscape! |
Possibly not appropriate for children aged 4 and over...
how cute! almost look like carrots!
ReplyDelete"Here, have these hot dogs, just don't eat me!"
ReplyDeleteWyglądają pieknie, ale wolałbym się nie spotkać z nimi w wodzie. Pozdrawiam.
ReplyDeleteThey look beautifully, but I would prefer not to meet with them in the water. Yours.
I'm constantly being amazed by these echinoderms, they're WAY more advanced then I ever thought they were.
ReplyDeleteThen again, I always kind of thought of them as 'proto-cnidarians that mutated until their larvae couldn't form a proper hydroid and then said 'screw it' and evolved benthic adults'. . . so 'jellyfish in a shell' just doesn't capture the range of possibilities.
@TexWisGirl: It could be a kind waiter at a vegetarian party, offering a carrot buffet!
ReplyDelete@Crunchy: Ah! The carnivorous option!
@Giga: They're so small I'm sure they'd look like little darlings!
@Lear's Fool: Ha! Yeah. I feel similar about annelids... I had NO idea!