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What animal lives upside down and sunbakes for food?
July 19, 2016|Uncategorized

What animal lives upside down and sunbakes for food?

Meet the Upside Down Jellyfish. You don’t have to be a genius to figure out that it…. well spends it’s life living upside down. Why? Does it offer better ocean views? To confuse predators? To get a constant head rush?

Nope. It’s to catch the suns rays. Not in a sunseeker, I need to get a killer tan for summer kind of way, but something far more practical… to eat

What? Aren’t jellyfish predators? Most are, except this little blob. It likes to make its own rules especially when it comes to food. While it has a net of tentacles fashioned with harpoons to capture prey, these tentacles are also filled with zoozanthallae, a special type of algae which captures sunlight and converts it to food! Like land plants and corals.

So to maximise the amount of sun exposure, it swims upside down revealing the tentacles to the sun. Impressive stuff for an animal that is over 97% water with a little thickener added. What is really cool is that these jellies aren’t born with the zoozanthallae, they pick them up as they’re floating along in the water.

So what is the benefit of two feeding modes and which one results in the most amount of food or calories for the jellyfish? Capturing prey using the nematocysts in the tentacles or the capturing of light for food or a combination of both?

To answer that question we decided to geek it up, throw on our lab coats and thick crazy scientist glasses and undertaken few experiments which included jellyfish:
1. In the dark with no food;
2. In the dark with food;
3. In the sun with no food; and
4. In the sun with food.
So what were the results? We’re not going to tell you. You’ll have to watch the video (mean aren’t we?)

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Extreme fishing captured in world first
April 11, 2016|Uncategorized

Extreme fishing captured in world first

There is extreme fishing and then is going to such extremes that you have a rod and a worm-like lure fused to your face. Quite frankly it’s the type of commitment we admire. Meet the Tasselled Anglerfish the ultimate fisher.

Nothing escapes this angler. It’s the master of disguise with camouflage so brilliant it can sit out in the open and not be seen. Silent and still it either waits for their prey to pass or lures their victims by casting the rod and worm-like bait.

And in the sea there is no such thing as a free feed. Any fish that tries to take the bait is swallowed whole, no time for chewing! It’s expandable mouth acting like a vacuum to suck up its prey. From beginning to mouth filling end, it’s all over in a split second.

Fish fall for the lure every time, hook, line and sinker.

What is really cool is that this is the first time that this behaviour has been filmed in high speed and the results are nothing short of spectacular.

PLEASE NOTE: Do not try this at home. Sticking a rod and worm-like lure to your face could result in untold injuries and years embarrassment.

PS. In case you haven’t guessed and before there is a revolt….this NOT Jamie Seymour in the video. This is our resident mermaid and Aquatic Scientist Sheree Marris, so please be kind. We wanted to inject a bit of estrogen into the videos and show women in science.

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Scaring scorpions makes them more venomous
March 14, 2016|Uncategorized

Scaring scorpions makes them more venomous

Although they look all A-team tough on the exterior with armour-plating and a don’t mess with me stinging tail, scorpions can actually be a bunch of scaredy cats. But don’t take this as a weakness because the scarder (yes that is a word, Google said so…) they are, the more potent their venom becomes. No-one has been able to show this in any other venomous animal.

Here’s how it all goes down (or up in this case..) Scorpions have two components to their venom. One for using in defence against furry animals with sharp teeth such as small marsupials and mice who like to eat scorpions and the other to capture prey such as crickets and spiders.

What researches found was that when the scorpion was regularly exposed to predators i.e the highly frightening frankenmouse, the amount of venom for defence increased and the venom for capturing prey decreased.
Which makes perfect sense, you need to try and give anything that is going to eat you as much whoop-ass as possible which comes in the form of a deadly tail fashioned with a venomous sting.

What is even more amazing is that they can do this within 4 weeks! If a venomous snake tried to pull that off, it would take them generations, which makes it super cool for a scorpion to be a super scary cat. The key message here… embrace your vulnerable side it could give you super powers. Don’t take our work for it, check out the video.

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Living in a bum – Odd animal relationships
February 29, 2016|UncategorizedVideos

Living in a bum – Odd animal relationships


They say ‘Home is where the heart is’, well for some ‘Home is where the bum is’.. Wait! What? Backup! Yep you heard right ‘Home is where the bum is’, if you’re a pearl fish and that bum is a sea cucumber.

Sea cucumbers are sausage shape animals that are found on the bottom of the ocean where they vacuum up the sand and filter out all the good bits. It seems as though pearl fish have taken a bit of a fancy for some particular sea cucumbers and set up house in their rear end.

Why? Is it the million dollar ocean views? We asked all these questions and more. The upside is, any place you live from now on is going to seem like paradise.

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World first for jelly wrestlers
August 20, 2015|Uncategorized

World first for jelly wrestlers

World first for jelly wrestlers

Believe it or not, some people make a career out of wrestling jellies. But this bunch of jelly enthusiasts take it to a whole other level. They wrestle jellies that have arms laced with venomous harpoons. Sounds dangerous? That’s just the way they roll out at James Cook University, Cairns.

Behind the scenes there is some serious science going on and the talented team of jelly wranglers have just added another world first to their belt. They’ve unlock a key stage of the Irukandji jellyfish lifecycle and have grown the polyp form in the laboratory.

Postgraduate student Robert Courtney and Professor Jamie Seymour, both from the Australian Institute of Tropical Health and Medicine (AITHM), now have a culture of more than a million polyps, which have so far produced around 100 tiny jellyfish.

Since polyps reproduce asexually, budding off clones of themselves, JCU now has a perpetual source of early-lifecycle jellyfish, which will be used to better understand the factors that drive the timing and intensity of the Irukandji season.

“Having a culture of Carukia barnesi polyps is a huge step forward in Irukandji research because it allows us to study the rest of the lifecycle of this species, which has not been observed before,” Mr Courtney said.

Carukia barnesi is the species originally identified in 1964 by Cairns doctor Jack Barnes as causing what we now know as Irukandji Syndrome. To understand the excitement about growing Irukandji polyps in the lab, it helps to understand the complex lifecycle of jellyfish in general.

“The jellyfish, or medusa, stage is what most people are familiar with, and that’s the stage in which some species pose a threat to humans,” Associate Professor Seymour said.

During this stage jellyfish grow to maturity and reproduce sexually, producing fertilised eggs. The eggs hatch as small larvae, which swim for a few days before attaching to a hard surface such as rocks or coral.

The larvae then develop into small polyps, which remain attached to one spot and reproduce asexually, budding off clones of themselves. The polyps are small (a millimetre across) and have short tentacles, which they use to catch prey. Eventually the polyps produce medusae (jellyfish).

“Species differ in how and when the polyps produce jellyfish, but the trigger is environmental,” Associate Professor Seymour said.

“Having this culture in the lab means we can investigate what the trigger is for Carukia barnesi, and better understand the timing and intensity of Irukandji season.”

The researchers are also gaining insight into where Irukandji polyps might be found in the marine environment – a detail that is currently unknown.

“Although it’s early days, the results from a series of experiments indicate that the polyps have a high tolerance to both temperature and salinity, but they do best at around 25 degrees Celsius,” Mr Courtney said.

“What’s really interesting is that they also seem to do best at low salinity levels – conditions much closer to what we find in estuaries and river mouths, rather than on the Great Barrier Reef.”

Associate Professor Seymour said this was an exciting observation. “The adult Carukia barnesi is considered an oceanic species, occurring mostly offshore. These results indicate that in the polyp stage it might actually be a coastal animal, similar to the larger box jellyfish species such as Chironex fleckeri.”

From their culture of Carukia barnesi, the researchers have grown about 100 baby jellyfish, which initially measure just one millimetre across.

“Even at that size they’re dangerous and could cause Irukandji syndrome,” Associate Professor Seymour said. “Eventually they grow to a maximum of around 3.5 centimetres across the bell, with tentacles up to 1.2 metres long.”

Understanding how different water quality parameters affect the polyp stage will also help researchers to determine how the length and intensity of Irukandji season might change in response to projected climate change scenarios.

Check out a video on the polyps here: Irukandji Polyps

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Attack of the killer cone snail
August 13, 2015|Additional infoUncategorizedVideos

Attack of the killer cone snail

 

It’s not the fastest animal going around, but what the cone shell has is patience, persistence and…… venomous harpoons that makes any animal wish it hadn’t crossed paths with it.

 

In this little video you can see the stromb shell trying to escape. It usually moves around on a big sticky foot, but dangerous situations like this call for more urgent action, so it uses its foot to jump away.

 

It’s a case of the tortoise and the hare. The stromb is quick to get out of the way, the cone shell; slow, patient and relentless. When the stromb is exhausted the cone pounces (actually it just slimes its way) on the stromb.

 

In this video you can see the oral siphon (the pink tip and black and white striped organ) smelling out its prey. When the prey is located and locked in on the cone shells proboscis (the bright orange thingy searching) comes out of the mouth, searches for a weak spot on its prey (in this case the soft flesh of the stromb) and delivers the final blow…. A venom loaded harpoon called a radula which paralyses the stromb and it’s eaten whole.

 

You can actually see the venom in the water, it’s the cloudy substance that comes out of the snail and to the left of the camera.

 

 

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Killer Cone Snails
August 10, 2015|UncategorizedVideos

Killer Cone Snails

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About
The Nature of Science (TNOS) showcases scientific research using our warped sense of humour, brains trust and creativity. See behind the microscopes, beakers and re-breathers as we dig a little deeper into the research and discovery of the natural world. If you want to take a walk on the wild side dust off your lab coats and jump on board as our talented team of scientists and world-class cinematographers use time-lapse and high-speed footage sequences to showcase science and nature like never before.
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