Posted on 08/14/2020 1:01:31 PM PDT by Red Badger
A close-up of Bathynomus raksasa, a new species of "supergiant" isopod Named Bathynomus raksasa, the holotype, or physical specimen that serves as the basis for the description and name of the new species, is a male that was measured to be 36.3 cm (14.3 in) long, which puts it among the largest giant isopods ever found. The second specimen was a female measuring 29.8 cm (11.7 in). Along with being bigger on average, the team noted other differences when compared to the closest known species, Bathynomus giganteus, including smoother skin and different body proportions and shapes.
The identification of this new species is an indication of just how little we know about the oceans, says Helen Wong, an author of the study. There is certainly more for us to explore in terms of biodiversity in the deep sea of our region.
The team says that the discovery is an example of deep-sea gigantism, an observation that some creatures that dwell in the deep tend to grow much bigger than their relatives in shallower waters or on land. Most isopods measure less than 10 mm (0.4 in) in length, but the 20 species in the supergiant Bathynomus genus grow to be more than 30 times larger. S JADE 2018
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All kinds of fascinating discoveries are likely lying in wait for us in the deep sea. Now scientists have pulled a new monster out of the waters off the coast of Indonesia. The creature is a new species of supergiant isopod, a huge marine relative of the common pillbug.
The discovery was made during the South Java Deep Sea Biodiversity Expedition 2018 (SJADES 2018). At depths between 950 and 1,260 m (3,115 and 4,135 ft), the team found two specimens of giant isopods that were soon determined to belong to a new species.
The female specimen of Bathynomus raksasa, seen from above and below. S JADE 2018
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Named Bathynomus raksasa, the holotype, or physical specimen that serves as the basis for the description and name of the new species, is a male that was measured to be 36.3 cm (14.3 in) long, which puts it among the largest giant isopods ever found. The second specimen was a female measuring 29.8 cm (11.7 in). Along with being bigger on average, the team noted other differences when compared to the closest known species, Bathynomus giganteus, including smoother skin and different body proportions and shapes.
The identification of this new species is an indication of just how little we know about the oceans, says Helen Wong, an author of the study. There is certainly more for us to explore in terms of biodiversity in the deep sea of our region.
The team says that the discovery is an example of deep-sea gigantism, an observation that some creatures that dwell in the deep tend to grow much bigger than their relatives in shallower waters or on land. Most isopods measure less than 10 mm (0.4 in) in length, but the 20 species in the supergiant Bathynomus genus grow to be more than 30 times larger.
Bathynomus raksasa can grow to well over 30 cm (11.8 in) more than 30 times larger than most isopodsNational University of Singapore
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In the past few years weve seen many new species reeled in from the deep oceans, including the deepest-dwelling fish in the world, hairy-chested Hoff crabs, eye-catching neon fish, and the longest animal ever recorded a floating zooid colony measuring 47 m (154 ft) long.
The new study was published in the journal ZooKeys.
Source: National University of Singapore
this is the thing that prolly eats you after sea burial when you sink to Dave Jone’s locker.
*ping*
New cockroach.
Looks like the rolly polly bugs I used to see as a kid in CA. Look exactly the same, only maybe a 1/4” head to tail.
it’s probably already been sold at some Chinese wet market
Just what I was thinking of.
Old Bay will make it right tasty!
I remember seeing a preview of that movie when I was a little kid. That would have been in the 1950's, so it would probably have been about the time it came out. We didn't have tv yet (too far out in the country to pick up the big city stations), so my parents must have taken me to a children's movie at the theater. They were probably less careful about previews back then.
Anyhow, I remember being absolutely terrified, mostly (I think) of a shot of a headless body. (I guess the crab monsters prefered the tastiest parts and left the rest....) Had nightmares for a week. But I could never remember the name of the movie. I've even tried to find it a few times over the years but I didn't have a clue about the title.
Now I'll have to see if it's streaming somewhere.
Pretty scary, but if we tell the Japanese that it’s an aphrodisiac, they’ll be hunted to extinction in no time.
And a semi-serious question: it looks like a trilobite. Are we sure that it’s not? Or at least a close cousin?
It does. It’s going to kill us all. It’s “The Attack Of The Giant Isopods!’’
That’s what I thought of too. One of my daughters was enthralled with roly-polies as a little kid. I’m sending her this. Can you imagine having those things at a foot long crawling all over the place in your yard!?
I was born in ‘56. I had an uncle that babysat us on weekends. He was always watching the Saturday afternoon scifi/horror movies.
I got to see a lot of them!
My Mom used to chastise him, ‘cause my sister and I would refuse to go to bed that night!
LOL!
Suppose the lobster jokes will slow down now?
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