Image: Patrick Randall |
He sets his gory daydreams aside and sighs as he dons his most disarming smile and swoops down to give a wayward youth a good, avuncular talking to.
Just another day in the life of your friendly, neighbourhood, customer focused crime cessation officer.
Image: Patrick Randall Siphopteron tigrinum |
A whole lot of them are found in tropical areas like the Indo-Pacific and the Caribbean. Others are found around Africa and a few range from California all the way up to the chill of Alaska.
Image: crawl_ray Sagaminopteron ornatum |
Image: Nathalie Rodrigues Sagaminopteron psychedelicum |
Most Headshields use this fleshy shield to plough through or under the surface layers of the seabed. They find lots of tasty worms and the like there.
Video: liquidguru
Batwings are different. They don't delve into the sea floor, which is good because they don't have the kind of flat, streamlined body that could effortlessly slip beneath the sand. Also a bunch of them have this strange, herky-jerky way of moving where it looks as if their head is hauling their body forward.
Batwings are often seen crawling on sponges and while no-one knows what most of them eat, it looks like at least some of them feed on tiny worms that live in burrows carved in those sponges. Others might eat flatworms.
Image: Christophe Cadet Siphopteron michaeli |
So they turned it into a straw! Naturally.
Image: crawl_ray Sagaminopteron ornatum going down |
Image: Anthony Pearson Party food! |
This roll-up creates a cavity filled with a constant flow of water that helps the Batwing breathe.
Image: DuPont, Anne Gastropteron chacmol rolled and unrolled |
You know how all slugs and snails are known as gastropods, which means "stomach foot"? Well, the family name Gastropteridae comes from Gastropteron: "stomach wing"!
Video: RAKUFUKU
When disturbed, Batwing Sea Slugs unfurl their stomach wings and take to weird, water-flight.
It looks utterly exhausting! And their globular shape remains entirely unsuitable for getting anywhere quickly. Unless they were one of those cannonball guys. Shame they got rid of that head shield...
Video: TacomaUWS
I presume it all works out just fine for them but man, my arms ache to watch it. And they're not always concerned about staying right way up. They kind of tumble and spin about as they swim.
I sure hope they have a good masseuse.
okay, i think i saw the 'wing' part. very cute.
ReplyDeleteHe's not the sea cucumber the ocean deserves, he's the one the ocean needs!
ReplyDeletequite the cute little things, even if their wings look nothing like a bat's
ReplyDeleteThey swim like a desperate man drowning in thick gravy and losing the battle.
ReplyDeleteOn another note, don't sea angels sort of swim like this too? But with more grace, obviously.
Oh Esther. Your beautiful mind imagines such lovely ways to die...
ReplyDelete@TexWisGirl: Yup, cutie-pies!
ReplyDelete@Crunchy: Haha! The world needs a hero! And sea cucumbers, too. To clean up afterwards, maybe.
@Porakiya Draekojin: Yeah, those simply aren't bat wings! More like pancake wings.
@Esther: I agree on all counts! Also, with ideas like that you should consider a career in James Bond villainy. I hear they're always interested in new, sinister ideas.