amatterofcomplication: pilgrimstateofmind: ATTENTION FOR A SECOND, YO: Real talk, this animal (
amatterofcomplication:pilgrimstateofmind:ATTENTION FOR A SECOND, YO: Real talk, this animal (the Ordovician Helmet crab, aka the Horseshoe crab, aka the Atlantic’s most at-risk shelled animal) is of a species that is close to 450 million years old. They are considered endangered, and often wash up on the shores of Long Island (this big lady crab was at TR park in Oyster Bay)Note: these animals are often used to extract their blue blood and cure diseases. They help the ocean out big time. And they are one of the longest-surviving species on the planet. They’re washing up and people don’t think to/are scared to save them because of their deceivingly harmless barbs. Take note, friends. Their barbs are NOT stingers. They cannot hurt you. Their pinchers aren’t pinchers, they’re just little legs that are actually really soft! The barb tail they have is actually what they use to stick into the ocean floor or the sand when waves knock them over or they flip onto their backs by accident. And you can help them out by flipping them back over very quickly and helping them scuttle back into the water if you see them struggling. This is way important. Just call me the Sarah McLachlan of horseshoe crabs.These are really cool. They were fished a lot to be used as bait, and then after a while it was realized that there were far fewer pole-to-pole migrating birds, turned out it was because their major pit stop was along the habitat of these things (they’re not really crabs, i think they’re closer related to scorpions, if memory serves) during spawning season to fatten up. -- source link
#september#september 19th 2014