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Giant (Sea) Woodlice Arrive in Britain for First Time
The Telegraph ^
| 22 Dec 2008
| Sarah Knapton
Posted on 12/23/2008 3:47:08 PM PST by nickcarraway
The one foot long Giant Isopods live up to 6,000ft down on the seabed where there is no light.
In the pitch black and cold they survive by feasting on dead and decaying fish and other marine animals.
Isopods have been unchanged for 160 million years and the creatures are sure to be popular attractions when they go on display.
Experts at the UK's Sea Life Centre parks organised for nine of them to be transported from the US where they had been caught in lobster nets in the Atlantic.
Each was individually wrapped in wet hessian and newspaper before being packed into a box of ice.
They were then flown thousands of miles to London before being transported by truck to the Sea Life Centre in Weymouth, Dorset.
The nine Isopods - Bathynonomous giganteus in Latin - will spend time in quarantine before going on display in large dark tanks in Blackpool.
Special reflective glass will give the giant creepy crawlies the feeling they are deep at the bottom of the sea, while still allowing spectators to peer in.
Chris Brown, a marine biologist who is looking after the Isopods in Weymouth, said they have adjusted well to their new environment.
He said: "Isopods live on the seabed at great depths.
"There are lots of them down at the bottom of the sea but because of the depths they live at, they rarely turn up in fishing nets or lobster pots.
"They are scavengers which feed on the carcasses of dead fish and other creatures. They are doing a very good clean-up job.
(Excerpt) Read more at telegraph.co.uk ...
TOPICS: Outdoors; Pets/Animals; Science
KEYWORDS: cookout
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To: Cvengr
Guess there wont be arguments with him
21
posted on
12/23/2008 4:03:29 PM PST
by
valkyry1
To: 353FMG
Someone will try it out, and next thing you know new delicacy at $6000 per lb
22
posted on
12/23/2008 4:05:04 PM PST
by
valkyry1
To: dragonblustar; AdmSmith; Berosus; Convert from ECUSA; dervish; Ernest_at_the_Beach; Fred Nerks; ...
> Isopods have been unchanged for 160 million years
They must be sick of living in their own pile of isopoop after that length of time.
23
posted on
12/23/2008 4:05:13 PM PST
by
SunkenCiv
(https://secure.freerepublic.com/donate/_______Profile finally updated Saturday, December 6, 2008 !!!)
To: nickcarraway
Would you cook that in butter? Steam it?
24
posted on
12/23/2008 4:07:15 PM PST
by
csvset
To: SunkenCiv
Trilobite on parsley with garlic.
25
posted on
12/23/2008 4:11:30 PM PST
by
Darksheare
(Ia! Ia! Cthulhu Fhtagn!)
To: valkyry1
Can someone post a picture of James Caravelle next to this? The resemblance is uncanny.
26
posted on
12/23/2008 4:13:30 PM PST
by
Private_Sector_Does_It_Better
(Obama's election will go down in history as the last desperate gasp of the dying MSM)
To: valkyry1
Hate to contract a case of THOSE crabs.
27
posted on
12/23/2008 4:15:53 PM PST
by
Mad_Tom_Rackham
(The committed will surely dominate the complacent.)
To: nickcarraway
Didn’t they design one of them alien movie monsters from that creature.
Ugh, I am going to have nightmares!
To: nickcarraway
These critters are obviously inspired by
29
posted on
12/23/2008 4:22:00 PM PST
by
Dysart
(Don't forget your change, America)
To: Private_Sector_Does_It_Better
30
posted on
12/23/2008 4:27:19 PM PST
by
robomatik
((wine plug: renascentvineyards.com cabernet sauvignon, riesling, and merlot))
To: Aliska
Youd think theyd get the bends. Plus putting them in a dark tank with little pressure, wonder how that would affect them. Evidently so far, so good, but that would indicate incredibly rapid adaptation. Exactly. I was thinking they would explode like Bill Clinton by the time they got up to one thousand feet.
31
posted on
12/23/2008 4:38:53 PM PST
by
BerryDingle
(I know how to deal with communists, I still wear their scars on my back from Hollywood-Ronald Reagan)
To: nickcarraway
Yummi!
Pre-prepared (previously frozen) lobster claw meat on your way to the table
Yummy!
32
posted on
12/23/2008 4:43:02 PM PST
by
aShepard
(Maybe 12/6 is the time to launch a constitutional amendment that lays out POTUS requirements!)
To: Joiseydude
There is a similar critter caught on the east coast of Australia, called a Moreton Bay Bug, that is an exceptionally tasty morsel.
33
posted on
12/23/2008 4:46:49 PM PST
by
ccmay
(Too much Law; not enough Order.)
To: Joiseydude
There is a similar critter caught on the east coast of Australia, called a Moreton Bay Bug, that is an exceptionally tasty morsel.
34
posted on
12/23/2008 4:46:53 PM PST
by
ccmay
(Too much Law; not enough Order.)
To: robomatik
35
posted on
12/23/2008 4:51:34 PM PST
by
Private_Sector_Does_It_Better
(Obama's election will go down in history as the last desperate gasp of the dying MSM)
To: Clemenza
Did that come off of Amy Winehouse? LOL!!!
36
posted on
12/23/2008 4:55:43 PM PST
by
SIDENET
(Hubba Hubba...)
To: BerryDingle
I keep getting outages so bear with me. I thought after I posted, that their bodies may be different, no lungs or air cavities, guess I don't know enough about them or how the bends works. I thought it was pressure in the body that when too quickly reduced causes great pain and possibly exploding or rupturing like you said.
It seems logical that even though they usually stay at the bottom of the sea (real bottom feeders there), they must rise to the surface or to a depth where they could get trapped in a fisherman's net. I doubt fish feed on them and don't know if there are any natural predators. Kind of creepy things but look somewhat like crabs.
37
posted on
12/23/2008 4:56:11 PM PST
by
Aliska
To: robomatik
38
posted on
12/23/2008 5:02:56 PM PST
by
gost2
To: Peanut Gallery
To: nickcarraway
It is amazing how similar they look to microscopic dust mites.
40
posted on
12/23/2008 5:55:03 PM PST
by
TigersEye
(I threw my shoe at Mohammed and hit Allah in the butt.)
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