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Bathynomus vaderi is a species of giant isopod found in the South China Sea off the coast of Vietnam near the Spratly Islands.The species is named after the Star Wars character Darth Vader because of its facial structure resembling the character's helmet.
By early 2024, 1-to-2-kilogram (2.2-to-4.4-pound) specimens were being sold for around 1 million Vietnamese dong ($40), the study noted. With the discovery of B. vaderi, scientists such as ...
"A 'sea pickle'? An animal that can grow to 60 feet long is washing up on the Oregon coast". USA Today. Huge pyrosome captured in the North Atlantic - story and images; Images taken by divers off southern California; The Bioluminescence Web Page; Divers with huge southern hemisphere pyrosomes; Millions of tropical sea creatures invade waters ...
Illinois was covered by a sea during the Paleozoic. Over time this sea would be inhabited by animals like brachiopods, clams, corals, crinoids, snails, sponges, trilobites. [3] 500 million years ago, during the Cambrian, the seas of Illinois resembled those of the modern Bahamas. [4] At the time, Illinois was located near the equator. [5]
The Essex fauna includes the sea anemone Essexella, long interpreted as a jellyfish, [14] sea worms (Nemertea, Priapulida, Chaetognatha, Annelida), snails, saltwater clams, shrimp, sea scorpions, chaetognaths, cephalopods, [6] chondrichthyans, actinopterygians, and some finned sarcopterygians. The most common species found is the Essexella sea
It is a member of the giant isopods (Bathynomus), and as such it is related—albeit distantly—to shrimps and crabs. [2] It was the first Bathynomus species ever documented and was described in 1879 by French zoologist Alphonse Milne Edwards after the isopod was found in fishermen's nets off the coast of the Dry Tortugas in the Gulf of Mexico .
A robotic explorer filmed the deep-sea worm as part of Schmidt Ocean Institute expedition of the Chile Margin
Megathura crenulata is a northeastern Pacific Ocean species of limpet in the family Fissurellidae [1] known commonly as the great keyhole limpet [2] or giant keyhole limpet. [3] Megathura is a monotypic genus; in other words, this is the only species in that genus.