Image: Carmel Vernia Hymenocera picta |
Shame it's just a pretty veneer surrounding a dark heart of sadistic evil...
Image: Steve Childs |
But what of his brother in slapstick. the harlequin?
Image: Daniel Kwok |
The poor, benighted fools.
His shrimp counterpart bears certain similarities.
They're found in warm coral reefs from Madagascar and the Red Sea all the way to Hawaii and the Galapagos Islands, via northern Australia and southeast Asia. They reach a mere 5 cm (2 in) long but that doesn't stop them catching the eye with their pearly white body and harlequin-like patches of bright, pastel colour.
Image: Steve Childs |
Between the claws is a collection of limbs that each end in a strange, flattened pad. When the shrimp holds them all together it looks something like a butterfly! Above that, between the eyes, are two long, petal-like antennae for sniffing out prey. It's all very pretty and dramatic. Not the least bit... sinister...
Image: Carmel Vernia |
This is when the horror begins.
Image: Nemo's great uncle |
Back at home, the Harlequins turn the starfish on its back and use their pincers to snip off and eat its tube feet. The poor old starfish is almost helpless and only getting increasingly so as its tootsies are consumed.
Video: Earth Touch
Harlequins take their sweet time, as one should with a good meal, whispering sweet nothings in one another's ears as they tear off another piece of living star-flesh. They will also cut through its skin and feast on the softness within. They don't eat carrion, they like their food fresh, so they're careful to start at the extremities and make their way to the more vital organs of the central disk last of all.
Harlequins have even been seen feeding their victims to ensure they remain alive and tasty to the very end. It's an end that may take days to arrive. Days of agony. Eaten alive. Feet first. Who needs rosemary and thyme when you can season your food with suffering and agony?
Image: Tim Proffitt-White Oh, but I couldn't eat a whole one |
The Harlequin Shrimp plays its part in a long tradition of evil...
Image: Chris Brown |
I approve of their Evil, even though I love echinoderms.
ReplyDeleteIt's such PRETTY evil!
One of my favorite organisms on earth, so glad you got around to posting about them!
ReplyDelete@lear's Fool: Prettiness covers a multitude of sins!
ReplyDelete@thegreatarthropodsearch: Woo! Glad you enjoyed!
This is a great way to describe these beautiful shrimp. At first I thought they were so innocent!!
ReplyDelete