bogleech:ART REFERENCE: when it comes to invertebrates, these are the five anatomical features I see
bogleech:ART REFERENCE: when it comes to invertebrates, these are the five anatomical features I see misrepresented the most often in pop culture, even in art that’s aiming for realism and accuracy!LEECHES: the mouth of a leech is not a circle of teeth, but a soft, toothless sucker surrounding a tiny, y-shaped opening. Inside of this are just three opposing teeth, nearly microscopic even in larger leeches. Other species have a barbed tube instead.MAGGOTS: portrayed all sorts of different ways in the media, but seldom ever anything close to their actual, walrus-like heads. The two hooks flank a soft, jawless mouth which swallows bits of food whole. What look like eyes (or breasts) are basically for smelling! Maggots also have NO legs or even traces of legs.SCORPIONS: these are eight-legged arachnids, and the claws are not a modified pair of legs, but a modified pair of mouth parts, the palps! Two claws, eight legs!OCTOPUSES (the most correct plural, by the way) : most people know that the mouth is a sharp beak at the center of the tentacles, and not part of the tubular siphon. A lot of otherwise accurate artwork, however, will give an octopus two siphons on either side of their head. They only have one! It’s not a symmetrical arrangement!MANTISES: the front leg of a mantis does not end with the “blade” at all, it ends in the same clawed, segmented foot as all other insect legs! Insect limbs as a rule never taper into points. Technically, neither do the legs of spiders, their “feet” are simply so tiny we can’t really see them! -- source link
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