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Soapfish cheats death by venomous stonefish
July 18, 2017|Videos

Soapfish cheats death by venomous stonefish

Many people have horror stories about having their mouths washed out with soap when they were younger. Turns out humans aren’t the only ones who don’t like it.

Enter the Soapfish, a fairly blah looking fish that hangs out on tropical reefs. Underestimate it at your peril. This kick butt fish just took on one of the deadliest fish in the world and swam off to tell the tale.

This fish gets its name from the toxic slime it generates when stressed is thought to protect it from potential ‘soap killers’. Being an ever-curious bunch, we decided to test out how effective this was as a mode of defence against the world’s most venomous fish…(insert dramatic music) the STONEFISH.

We placed a Soapfish in with several Stonefish and waited to see what happened. As expected the Stonefish swallowed the Soapfish when it came within striking distance BUT then spat it out just as quickly (science can be a torturous thing at times…). To see all the gory detail we filmed it in high speed.

What was really interesting is that after one failed attempt at eating the Soapfish, the Stonefish didn’t try again, even after long period of time. So they learnt their lesson. At one point the Soapfish even sat on the head of the Stonefish and it wasn’t budging a bit.

To test if this was just because of the residual soapy toxin in the Stonefish mouths we put in a Damsel fish and you know what? They gobbled it right down without a second thought.

So it must be an extremely powerful toxin to get that sort of reaction and so quickly. Another thing that is really interesting is that the Soapfish is scaleless, so perhaps this secretion is also an adaptation to get the toxin out quicker?

Some studies also suggested that the toxic slime could decrease the friction in the water, requiring less energy to swim, which is advantageous when you spend most of your time in the middle of the water column. Kind of like, sharks and the denticles that cover their body.

While there are more questions than answers with this little known fish, the Soapfish can now claim the title of defeating the world’s most venomous fish, which will no doubt give it bragging rights down at the local reef on a Saturday night.

That’s the nature of science.

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Corals climax despite doomsday messages reef is dead
December 20, 2016|Videos

Corals climax despite doomsday messages reef is dead


Corals climax despite doomsday messages the reefs dead

Love makes the world go round, it also makes wildlife go absolute crazy, people included. It’s a basic seeded instinct. It’s why we’re here. The result is ingenious ways that animals have increased their chances of reproducing or what we like to call doing the ‘no pants dance’. Enter the humble reef building coral, the glamazon of tropical reefs all around the world.

We know these animals can build the largest living structure, which can be seen from space… the Great Barrier Reef. It’s an impressive feat for an animal no bigger than a thumbnail. But when it comes to love, what the corals can’t do is move. They’re stuck to the spot, which doesn’t seem to leave many possibilities for finding a mate on a Saturday night.

What’s their solution? Corals cleverly co-ordinate the release of their packages of ‘sex cells’ at the same time. Scientists at James Cook University first discovered this natural phenomenon in the early 1980’s. It happens only on one night of the year for each species, so precision timing is everything. The moon becomes their sexual timepiece, providing the cue for the mass release of eggs and sperm into the water column.

The result? 2-7 days after the full moon corals release their eggs and sperm into the water, in what scientists have dubbed ‘the world’s largest synchronized climax’. It’s safe group sex at a distance without the nasty complications and STD’s.

This increases the chance of fertilization. Releasing their eggs and sperm at night also makes it more difficult for predators to see, and what predators can see them are simply overwhelmed and unable to devour such a mass of food, allowing most of the sex cells to survive.

We were lucky enough to witness this maritime orgy at Moore Reef, off the southern coast of Cairns in the northern section of the Great Barrier Reef a couple of weeks ago. It was a magical sight as billions of coral polyps broadcasted their eggs and sperm into the water, rising to the surface like a silent sexual symphony.

It begs the question… if you’ve got billions of different species of eggs and sperm swimming around at the same time, how do they know who is who and who they should do? Scientists have discovered that the eggs contain a chemical substance or ‘sperm attractant’ that is irresistible to the sperm of the same species, while a pseudo chastity belt or membrane keeps other eager sperm at bay.

What happens next? The sperm penetrates the egg and within a few hours it develops into a swimming larva where it rides the currents. If it’s not eaten by the plankton feeders, jellyfish and other filter-feeders it will settles on a hard surface and metamorphosise into a single coral polyp to begin a new coral colony.

Unfortunately no spawning events were recorded in far northern sections, which have been heavily hit by bleaching. But there is hope and we saw it first hand. Hopefully this spawning event that we witnessed can help recolonized the northern counterparts and help with the reef recovery efforts.

So people of the world…we proudly proclaim that romance on the reef isn’t dead and our love affair with it shouldn’t be either. So get it on the action and ‘sea for yourself’. Admittedly you may have to wait another year, but trust us; it’s a climax worth waiting for.

Credit: Big thanks to the Biopixel Crew for the trip out to the reef and for scaring the living daylights out of our resident mermaid (she is still in a padded room rocking back and forth..) and Sunlover for letting us use their pontoon. Footage: Oceans IQ

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Why Australian snakes are so venomous
June 22, 2016|Videos

Why Australian snakes are so venomous

Australia is known as the place with all the deadly animals. Whether they have fur, fins, shells or scales, Australia has them. Snakes are no exception. In fact Australia is known to have loads of venomous snakes. Some of the most venomous on the planet. Think the
Inland Taipan, Brown, Mulga, Death Adder and Tiger Snakes.

So the TNOS team set out to explore just why our snakes are so darn venomous. What we discovered is that it depends on a number of factors including:

  • How much food is available;
  • The volume of venom the snakes produce;
  • Minimising injury to the snake; and
  • The potency of the venom.
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Creepy Giant Spider Crab Aggregation
June 22, 2016|Videos

Creepy Giant Spider Crab Aggregation

There is getting crabby… but this is just all out ridiculous! We have never seen soooooo many crabs. We know some people are going to be freaked out, but us? Hey throw is in there and let them crawl over us (did I mention we were a weird bunch??? )

Every year as the waters cool on the southern shores, hundreds of thousands of Giant Spider crabs find their way up on the sandy shallows Rye and Blairgworie in Port Phillip Bay, Melbourne Australia. This happens between May – July ever year and the result is a moving sea of orange crabs that blanket the shallows.

As the name suggests these crabs are massive. Their legs are over 70cm long with a body measuring nearly 17cm wide. They move in organised chaos on 8 long legs. Their weapons, swollen claws. Their mission, seek shelter in the safety of the sandy shallows, moult and in some cases mate.

Like most crustaceans, a hard suit of armour protects these crabs. What it doesn’t allow the crabs to do though is grow. So the crabs need to get rid of the old armour and grow a new bigger one.

To do this, they secrete a special enzyme that separates the old shell from the underlying skin, while a new soft paper-like shell is secreted beneath the old one. The crabs then start absorbing seawater and swell, causing the old shell to come apart. The soldier’s shell then simply opens up like a lid and the crab extracts itself.

Once one crab starts to moult it sets off a chain reaction and the rest of the orange-clad army moult almost simultaneously. Moulting not allows the crabs to grow, it helps to rid them of parasites and other animals growing on their shells including bacteria that can weaken and erode their protective uniform.

It’s thought that by aggregating and moulting together, the less chance they have of getting eaten, a simple case of safety in numbers. During this moulting process, the soft crabs are vulnerable to the mouths of hungry hunters.

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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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How venom kills – Venom 101
February 16, 2016|Videos

How venom kills – Venom 101

Venom… the word sends chills up your spine at the mere mention of it. And with good reason. Its aim is to incapacitate its victims and boy does it work a treat. What’s really interesting is that not all venoms are equal and not all work the same way. They’re as diverse as the animals that deliver it. From clotting blood, causing paralysis and destroying living cells.

It’s a fascinating world that Assoc. Professor Jamie Seymour knows a thing or ten about, after all that’s his shtick. So given that he’s a fun-loving sharing kind of guy he given us a bit of a lesson, kind a like a venom 101 of his world (which is venomology and toxinology which are tricky words to say let alone spell) showing us how they work on their victims which sometimes include the human-kind, and the results are….. all sorts of awesome! He also sets us straight us straight on the difference venom and poison, which we will now be able to use with so much confidence, the world will think he has been cloned!

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Deadly Jelly Wrestling
February 9, 2016|TNOSVideos

Deadly Jelly Wrestling

Think you could handle a career jelly wrestling? You’ll get sweaty with the long hot sticky nights but here’s a tip – It doesn’t include buxom babes in skimpy bikini’s in a jelly filled blow up pool. For this type of wrestling, your pool is the warm tropical waters of North Queensland and your opponents are pulsating gelatinous jellies with deadly tentacles.

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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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Jellyfishing
August 4, 2015|Videos

Jellyfishing

Meet the world’s deadliest fisher, the Irukandji Jellyfish. This tiny jellyfish has extendable arms that are loaded with venom filled harpoons. To attract prey the Irukandji extends then quickly retracts sections of it’s long arms, like it is ‘jigging‘ for fish. When contact is made with the arms, a barrage of venom filled harpoons (nematocysts) are unleashed on the unsuspecting victim.

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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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