
Tag: animals
Alligator Snapping Turtles hunt by laying motionless and
wiggling the worm-like appendage at the tip of their tongue to attract
prey. (source)
Did you know they make their nests from spider webs??

Clownfish
(Amphiprion nigripes)
in sea anemone (Heteractis magnifica).

Sea Bunny Nudibranch (source).

by Costas Balafas, Greece, 1950s.
These Lizards Are Full of Green Blood That Should Kill Them
“Animal blood comes in a rainbow of hues
because of the varying chemistry of the molecules it uses to carry
oxygen. Humans use hemoglobin, whose iron content imparts a crimson
color to our red blood cells. Octopuses, lobsters, and horseshoe crabs
use hemocyanin, which has copper instead of iron, and is blue instead of
red—that’s why these creatures bleed blue. Other related molecules are
responsible for the violet blood of some marine worms, and the green
blood of leeches. But the green-blooded lizards use good old hemoglobin.
Their red blood cells are, well, red. Their green has a stranger
origin: Biliverdin.
They should be dead. Biliverdin can damage DNA, kill cells, and destroy
neurons. And yet, the lizards have the highest levels of biliverdin ever
seen in an animal. Their blood contains up to 20 times more of it than
the highest concentration ever recorded in a human—an amount that proved
to be fatal. And yet, not only are the lizards still alive, they’re not
even jaundiced. How do they tolerate the chemical? Why did they evolve
such high levels of biliverdin in the first place? And why, as Austin’s
colleague Zachary Rodriguez has just discovered, did they do so on
several occasions?”
Source: TheAtlantic

The mantis shrimp “spearing” the
head of a fish. Mantis shrimp wait for fish to swim near their burrow
and then strike with their claws and drag them into their burrows. Their
strikes are so strong that they have been known to smash aquarium
glass.








