Image: Richard Ling Parastichopus parvimensis |
Sea cucumbers are like pieces of intestinal tract that escaped the tyranny of anatomy and made a life for themselves on the sea floor, very slowly squirming around and feasting on the very bacteria-infested muck they wallow in.
Image: Travis Warty Sea Cucumbers can reach over 30 cm (a foot) long |
The Warty Sea Cucumber does not disappoint...
Image: Steve Lonhart/NOAA MBNMS They live along the coast of Mexico and California |
I know what you're thinking and no, Warty Sea Cucumbers don't defend themselves by popping their boils and squirting pus at their assailants. They use good, old fashioned evisceration instead, where they tear up their insides and thrust internal organs in the face of mortified predators.
Image: Roban Kramer |
Pity they can't do that with their skin.
For about five seconds I thought the Cosmetic Surgeonfish was an actual species of fish...OTL
ReplyDeleteHahaha! Sorry! Surgeonfish are real but I don't think any of them have gone into that specialism
ReplyDeleteToo bad they CAN'T launch questionable liquids from those big boils. That'd be so wrong on so many levels. Also, for a moment, I thought it had hundreds of black spikes/spines.
ReplyDeletei should try to eat and view your posts at the same time...
ReplyDeleteThose are the black-tipped papillae but they're not really spiny like on a sea urchin. It would be REALLY cool if nasty gunk poured out of them! It would be one of those kind of funny/wholly disgusting deals!
ReplyDelete@TexWisGirl: Live dangerously why don't you!
ReplyDeleteI don't think I'll ever get used to the idea of the evisceration thing.
ReplyDeleteIt shouldn't be possible!
ReplyDelete