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Favorite Freaky Species
#1
Favorite Freaky Species
Have any favorite weird species?

Here's a few of my faves:

Bathynomus Giganteus

[Image: rr6eV.jpg]

Brookesia Micra

[Image: UhDgy.jpg]

http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/...r-science/

Water Bear

[Image: SgTSa.jpg]

Tree Lobster

[Image: H85Cr.jpg]

http://grist.org/list/giant-awesome-tree...in-hiding/

Have you any favorite, freaky species? Please do share.
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#2
RE: Favorite Freaky Species
I'm very fond of some of our unique animals,such as the kangaroo,koala and platypus.

Below is photo (taken " some years ago") which could not be taken anywhere else in the world: Me with a 'wiild' wallaby, on Rotnest Island, Western Australia.



[Image: rottnest-2.jpg]
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#3
RE: Favorite Freaky Species
Rimicaris exoculata

http://deepseacenter.rutgers.edu/photos.asp?p=22

It has no normal eyes, but it can see with its shell because it's shell has a retina
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#4
RE: Favorite Freaky Species
Cordyceps fungi

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XuKjBIBBAL8
Save a life. Adopt a greyhound.
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#5
RE: Favorite Freaky Species
I for one welcome our new brain-eating fungal overlords.
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#6
RE: Favorite Freaky Species
@padraic- I love what wiki says about the platypus:

Quote:The unusual appearance of this egg-laying, venomous, duck-billed, beaver-tailed, otter-footed mammal baffled European naturalists when they first encountered it,

Ya think?!? LOL



(June 9, 2012 at 1:51 am)Chuck Wrote: Rimicaris exoculata

http://deepseacenter.rutgers.edu/photos.asp?p=22

It has no normal eyes, but it can see with its shell because it's shell has a retina

It's a living eyeball! That's the shit.

(June 9, 2012 at 2:03 am)popeyespappy Wrote: Cordyceps fungi

That's wild! Definitely going on my faves list.
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#7
RE: Favorite Freaky Species
The platypus - irrefutable evidence for an intelligent designer.

By "intelligent", I mean "completely whacked on cocaine and 'ludes".

Fuck. Ludes? I just dated myself. LOL
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#8
RE: Favorite Freaky Species
(June 9, 2012 at 2:12 am)aleialoura Wrote: That's wild! Definitely going on my faves list.

Sir David failed to get into one of the interesting aspects of the fungi. They create mind controlled zombies.
Quote:The fungus's spores enter the body of the insect likely through the cuticle by enzymatic activity, where they begin to consume the non-vital soft tissues. Yeast stages of the fungus spread in the ant's body and presumably produce compounds that affect the ant's brain and change its behaviour by unknown mechanisms, causing the insect to climb up the stem of a plant and use its mandibles to secure itself to the plant. Infected ants bite the leaf veins with abnormal force, leaving telltale dumbbell-shaped marks. A search through plant fossil databases revealed similar marks on a fossil leaf from the Messel pit which is 48 million years old.[5][6]
The fungus then kills the ant, and continues to grow as its mycelia invade more soft tissues and structurally fortify the ant's exoskeleton.[2] More mycelia then sprout out of the ant, and securely anchor it to the plant substrate while secreting antimicrobials to ward off competition.[2] When the fungus is ready to reproduce, its fruiting bodies grow from the ant's head and rupture, releasing the spores. This process takes 4 to 10 days.[2]
The changes in the behavior of the infected ants are very specific, giving rise to the term zombie ants, and tuned for the benefit of the fungus. The ants generally clamp to a leaf's vein about 25 cm above the ground, on the northern side of the plant, in an environment with 94-95% humidity and temperatures between 20 and 30 °C. According to David Hughes, "You can find whole graveyards with 20 or 30 ants in a square metre. Each time, they are on leaves that are a particular height off the ground and they have bitten into the main vein [of a leaf] before dying".[7] When the dead ants are repositioned in various other situations, further vegetative growth and sporulation either fails to occur or results in undersized and abnormal reproductive structures.[8]

BTW, Our species is currently investigating ways to use this fungus.

Quote:The Ophiocordyceps fungus contains various known and untapped bioactive metabolites, and is being investigated as a new source of natural drugs with immunomodulatory, antitumor, hypoglycemic and hypocholesterolemic functions.[10]

Zombie shroms anyone?

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ophiocordyc...ilateralis

(June 9, 2012 at 2:21 am)Cthulhu Dreaming Wrote: The platypus - irrefutable evidence for an intelligent designer.

By "intelligent", I mean "completely whacked on cocaine and 'ludes".

Fuck. Ludes? I just dated myself. LOL

[Image: 1E12EC17.jpg]
Save a life. Adopt a greyhound.
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#9
RE: Favorite Freaky Species
One of my favorites is a species of the Short Horned Lizard (Phrynosoma hernandesi) that can squirt blood from it's eyes.

Like this:


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#10
RE: Favorite Freaky Species
(June 9, 2012 at 12:44 am)aleialoura Wrote: Have any favorite weird species?

Here's a few of my faves:

Bathynomus Giganteus

[Image: rr6eV.jpg]

[Image: isopod.jpg]

Think about it.
[Image: mybannerglitter06eee094.gif]
If you're not supposed to ride faster than your guardian angel can fly then mine had better get a bloody SR-71.
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