The peacock mantis shrimp has the most amazing eyes in the animal kingdom and likes to smash things with its tiny yet mighty mitts. But this aggressive creature is also helping scientists to improve cancer detection.
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Like a gorgeous assassin, the peacock mantis shrimp is beautiful and deadly. The colorful marine creature lives in the Indo-Pacific and is striking to behold. But it also packs a powerful punch.
The mantis shrimp is not actually a shrimp but a tiny, belligerent crustacean, known as a stomatopod. Despite its size — it can grow to anywhere between 3 and 18 centimeters — it can split skin to the bone and smash through glass with the two tiny appendages attached to the front of its body.
These dactyl clubs can strike with the force of 1500 Newtons or 335 pounds. They spring forth from the mantis shrimp's body with such speed that it can vaporize surrounding water molecules.
Scientists are so impressed by the creature's ability to remain undamaged when it delivers a punch that they are studying it to develop better body armor. Fellow sea creatures are reportedly less impressed.
Perhaps even more impressive are the peacock mantis shrimp's eyes, which are the most complex in the animal kingdom.
Each eye has 12 light sensitive cells, called cones, meaning they could technically see millions more colors than humans. We, by contrast typically have just three types of cones: red, blue and green, meaning we can see hues of blue, green, bits of yellow and all the colors derived from red.
The peacock mantis shrimp can see something that no other animal can: circularly polarized light or CPL. This kind of light does not move on a flat plane, but travels in a spiral. Scientists aren't exactly sure why they can detect CPL, but it could be to warn off predators or attract mates. Either way, their eyes are helping in the development of satellites and cancer detection.
To find out more about these amazing creatures, listen to our podcast.
Jellyfish: underrated beauties
Jellyfish have a bad rep. Most people are disgusted by or even afraid of them. But the squishy sea-dwellers are beautiful creatures - who don't even need a brain to gracefully float through the seas.
Image: Stefan Ebersberger
No brain? No problem!
Jellyfish have been floating around the Earth's oceans for 500 million years now - without a brain to guide them. Jellyfish use their sophisticated nervous system which immediately translates outside impulses into action. That's why this rhizostome jellyfish and its relatives don't need a brain to process information.
Image: picture alliance/Photoshot
Medusa of the seas
Jellyfish live in the sea. But the name is misleading - they're not actually fish. They're members of the cnidaria phylum and are related to corals and anemones. They're also classified as medusozoa - with the tentacles floating around their bodies, they look a little like the Greek monster Medusa, who had living snakes instead of hair on her head.
Image: picture alliance/dpa/A. Heimken
Umbrella with tentacles
A jellyfish body contains up to 99 percent water. Human bodies only contain around 63 percent water. A big part of the jellyfish is its umbrella-shaped bell. Attached to that is the manubrium, through which the animal takes up nutrients, and hundreds of tentacles. With some jellyfish, the tentacles can be a couple of meters long. The animals use them to feel their way around and to hunt prey.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/S. Zankl
Giant jellyfish
Most jellyfish are white or transparent. There are also some exceptional jellyfish species out there, though. The Asian Nomura's jellyfish isn't especially colorful, but it's huge: it has a diameter of up to two meters (6.5 feet) and can weigh more than 200 kilograms (440 pounds).
Scientists consider jellyfish plankton because they're swept along by the current of the sea. The jellyfish isn't great at getting anywhere by itself. It propels itself forward by constricting and relaxing its bell, achieving speeds of up to 10 kilometers per hour (6 mph). Even bugs walk faster.
Image: picture alliance/Photoshot
Pretty and poisonous
Jellyfish might look graceful floating through water like squishy goasts, but some of them have extremely dangerous tentacles - like this lion's mane jellyfish. Their tentacles are covered in nematocysts. The animal injects the stinging cells into its prey and kills them with the toxic injection. Plankton, algae, small crabs and fish larvae are all on the menu.
Image: cc-by-sa/Kip Evans
Burns like fire
For humans, encounters with the lion's mane jellyfish are very painful: after a sting, our skin burns and develops red welts. At least there's no lethal danger - which can't be said for encounters with the box jellyfish, or sea wasp. This species is at home along the northern and eastern coasts of Australia and in the western Pacific. Its toxin is among the strongest in the animal kingdom.
Image: picture-alliance/R. Wilms
Colorful special effects
What else can jellyfish do? Tons of things! Pelagia noctiluca for example starts glowing as soon as its triggered mechanically, for example by water turbulence. This ability to create light, either alone or with the help of bacteria, is called bioluminescence. Incredible, isn't it?
Image: picture-alliance/blickwinkel/H. Goethel
Sophisticated life cycle
The sexual and asexual reproduction of jellyfish alternates from generation to generation. When jellyfish have produced sexual cells, these cells merge and create a larva type that attaches itself to the seafloor. A polyp emerges from this, and later several new jellyfish emerge from the polyp.
Image: picture-alliance/Geisler-Fotopress
The sleepyhead of the sea
Jellyfish have no brain and no heart. But they do sleep. Surprised? Researchers at the California Institute of Technology have found that the upside-down jellyfish, Cassiopeia - which spends most of its time on the seabed - shows signs of sleep at night. How is that? Well, their pulse drops when they nap. And when they are disturbed, it takes them a while to wake up - just as with humans.
Image: Caltech
Jellyfish carpaccio
Beach towns often have to deal with jellyfish invasions. Bioligists believe this is due to overfishing and the decline of sea turtles and jellyfish-eating fish. But the squishy sea-dweller is also gaining popularity as a delicacy on restaurant tables. It has no natural aroma, which makes it the perfect flavor carrier.
Image: picture-alliance/Photoshot
Stranded
If you find a sad blob like this on the beach, it's most likely a jellyfish out of its natural habitat. If you want to do a good deed, grab some gloves for protection and deliver the animal back into the sea. Don't touch it with your bare hands, don't step on it and don't toss it onto your unsuspecting girlfriend while she's sunbathing.