If you appreciate biodiversity and want to read about organisms other than pet cats, and if you aren't too squeamish about spiky creatures with crunchy carapaces of squishy ones encapsulated in slime, the latest Circus of the Spineless is just the thing for you. Browse the thumbnails at Pharyngula, and follow through to the critter that appeals to you most. I thought the snail armored in iron sulfide was spectacular, but the mantispids are pretty neat, too, and I'll always have a soft spot for the squid. Oh, and the strange pram bugs that occupy salp tests…never mind, you need to read them all.

14 Comments
Bayesian Bouffant, FCD · 29 January 2006
And here we are, trapped in the tetrapod body plan.
'Rev Dr' Lenny Flank · 29 January 2006
You could cut off an arm or leg, or something. :)
Julie Stahlhut · 29 January 2006
I gave up on the vertebrate-centric world long ago. :-)
And mantispids are a fantastic example of convergence. The first time I saw one, when I was a kid, I thought I'd discovered a new kind of mantis.
Spike · 29 January 2006
This is it! I think the entry about the iron-sulfide armored snail is just what we've been needing.
These words: There is still much to find out about this snail ...should be an invitation to the ID crowd to make a prediction.
What can ID tell us about how the snail/bacteria symbiosis controls the production of the scales?
This is your chance, all you DI Fellows, to trump the scientists and prove something was designed before they find a natural cause.
H. Humbert · 29 January 2006
Spike · 29 January 2006
H.H.,
(Named after an infamous Nabokov character, are you?)
Humans don't really eat our own food, either, we have all kinds of bacteria living in our guts as well, and, in a sense, we eat their waste (at least partly).
"Selfish Gene"-style, however, WE have to do all the work to fill our tummies, so THOSE critters can have a happy life.
I've often wondered about gene-slicing the cuttlefish camouflage capabilities in as a substitute for our melanin system. We could then all be any color we wanted to. "Race" would be nearly meaningless. Not that we wouldn't find something else to winge about...
H. Humbert · 30 January 2006
An Enquiring Mind · 30 January 2006
Ball o' Gall!
Ball o' Gall!
Ball o' Gall!
An Enquiring Mind · 30 January 2006
Oh, yeah. TCM has run Lolita a couple of times this month. Fun how a normal guy like me forgot that. I'm really just a regular guy. Yes sir. Real normal. Shall I talk to the hotel clerk, Swine, about that room, Mr. Humbert?
D Watkins · 30 January 2006
H. Humbert,
One fragment of the plot in David Brin's Comet included a faction that had been infected with symbiotic organisms that provided them with the nutrition they needed. FWIW, it was an interesting book, but I'm not sure it was the most probable outcome (does that have any meaning for a sci-fi novel?)
I hear a cool song in the making ...
There's nothing you can plot that hasn't already been plotted...
Space Parasite · 30 January 2006
Alas, I worked it out once, and the sunlight that impinges on something the size of a human isn't nearly enough to power a human metabolism, not even a couch potato. Very sad.
'Rev Dr' Lenny Flank · 30 January 2006
geogeek · 1 February 2006
Re: symbiosis with sulfur-fixing bacteria (I'm assuming that's what bacteria associated with pyrite would be doing): don't forget all of the macrofauna in seafloor hydrothermal vent systems. Most people will recall the cool hemoglobin-bearing tube worms from the Pacific, but there are also plenty of mollusks, and they look incredibly disgusting with all that hemoglobin pouring out of them.
geogeek · 1 February 2006
Urk, sorry, it _is_ a vent organism. I should have went through the link first, but I was distracted by the cephalopods, for which I have a soft spot.