Quickwitter



Jan 16 Reblogged

I like to think that scientists giggle when they come up with names like this one…
animalworld:

BONE EATING SNOT FLOWER Osedax mucofloris©NHM / Nature Online
Translated from the mixed Greek and Latin used in scientific names, “Osedax mucofloris” literally means “bone-eating snot-flower” which is an unattractive name for any species, even a sea worm that feasts on dead whales. These deep-sea siboglinid polychaete worms, are alo called boneworms, zombie worms, or bone-eating worms.
Scientists from the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute using the submarine ROV Tiburon first discovered the genus in Monterey Bay, California, in February 2002. The worms were found living on the bones of a decaying gray whale in the Monterey Canyon, at a depth of 2,893 m (9,491 ft).
Lacking stomach and mouth, Osedax rely on symbiotic species of bacteria to digest whale fat and oils and to release the nutrients in a form that they can absorb. Osedax have colorful feathery plumes that act as gills  and unusual root-like structures that absorb nutrients.
Male Osedax are microscopic dwarfs that live as “harems” inside  the lumen of the gelatinous tube that surrounds each female. An  individual female can house hundreds of these males in her tube. Source
Other posts:
Christmas Tree Worm
Venus Flytrap Sea Anemone
Pompeii Worm
Oaten Pipes

I like to think that scientists giggle when they come up with names like this one…

animalworld:

BONE EATING SNOT FLOWER
Osedax mucofloris
©NHM / Nature Online

Translated from the mixed Greek and Latin used in scientific names, “Osedax mucofloris” literally means “bone-eating snot-flower” which is an unattractive name for any species, even a sea worm that feasts on dead whales. These deep-sea siboglinid polychaete worms, are alo called boneworms, zombie worms, or bone-eating worms.

Scientists from the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute using the submarine ROV Tiburon first discovered the genus in Monterey Bay, California, in February 2002. The worms were found living on the bones of a decaying gray whale in the Monterey Canyon, at a depth of 2,893 m (9,491 ft).

Lacking stomach and mouth, Osedax rely on symbiotic species of bacteria to digest whale fat and oils and to release the nutrients in a form that they can absorb. Osedax have colorful feathery plumes that act as gills and unusual root-like structures that absorb nutrients.

Male Osedax are microscopic dwarfs that live as “harems” inside the lumen of the gelatinous tube that surrounds each female. An individual female can house hundreds of these males in her tube. Source

Other posts:

Christmas Tree Worm

Venus Flytrap Sea Anemone

Pompeii Worm

Oaten Pipes

Notes

  1. ashberg reblogged this from animalworld and added:
    dark progressive metal band
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    folding down through
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  19. preguntashermosas reblogged this from faunafabula and added:
    As if the name is not neat enough, it also has to be a whale-specific detritivore. After my own heart. Except on the...
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  21. crittercuteness reblogged this from scarygirl

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