Here's a little guy with a big surprise for everyone he wants to share with!
He is called the "pistol shrimp" for good reason, as the article below explains. Just shows that nature does, indeed, have a strange sense of humor!
Front row seats at a rock concert may make your ears ring -- the 120-plus decibel sound output from the stage can put you at risk for tinnitus (ringing in the ears), which typically begins at 127 decibels. Gunshots register at 133 decibels. A Boeing 727, at takeoff, creates sound at about 165 decibels. Blow up a pound of TNT from a few yards away and you'll be near 180 decibels. And when something breaks the sound barrier, that sonic boom weighs in at 213 decibels.
The pistol shrimp, pictured above, laughs at such silence.
The shrimp are, true to their name, tiny -- no more than the size of a finger, per National Geographic. But unlike most shrimp, pistol shrimp have -- proportionally speaking -- a massively enlarged claw protruding from their bodies. And while these shrimp use their claw to subdue their prey, they do not do so in the standard, pinch-and-grab sense. Rather, they use the claws to make mind-boggling loud noises. Literally.
When the shrimp snaps its claw shut, it creates a bubble. The bubble -- and not the snapping of the claw itself -- is responsible for a sound which, according to the Daily Mail, can hit 218 decibels. Nat Geo explains how the sound is created: "When the claw snaps shut, a jet of water shoots out from a socket in the claw at speeds of up to 62 miles (100 kilometers) an hour, generating a low-pressure bubble in its wake. As the pressure stabilizes, the bubble collapses with a loud bang." On top of that, the bubble's burst creates a flash of light which, while not visible to the naked eye, can be detected with the proper instruments. As a study published in Nature concluded, this necessarily leads to extremely high temperatures -- around 5,000 degrees Kelvin. (The temperature of the Sun's surface is believed to be about 6,000 degrees Kelvin, for comparison's sake.)
The entire event happens in a split second, requiring high speed cameras in order for us to study this curiosity of nature. In that split second, however, the shrimp accomplishes its goal. The claw acts like a gun -- hence the name of the shrimp -- and extreme sound and pressure from the claw's snapping action is its ammunition. The "bullet" stuns other shrimp, which the pistol shrimp then drags back into its burrow and eat for dinner.
Just imagine if this bad boy grew to a larger size! Fishermen all over the world would be very careful about catching a net full of them, don't you think?
You can thank Dan over at "Now I Know" for this tidbit!
Coffee out on the patio again. Man, I am loving this weather here lately!
9 comments:
They still look good to eat.
Verrrrrrry interesting. Glad I'm not the prey.
Kind of like an ex girlfriends farts.
I WAS going to Long John silver for lunch.. Think I'll get hamburger instead.
Deadly little Shrimp..
Pistol Shrimp
i love to eat shrimp. But this little guy is off limits. Thanks for the tidbit of info. The weather here has been very good lately also.
Interesting for sure. I love shrimp too, but maybe not this one.
Yes the weather is great here too. Mornings just a tad chilly but by 8:30 quite nice.
Hey Duke...
Shrimp always do! I used to love them!
Thanks for coming over today!
Hey Momlady...
You and me both!
Deadly little rascals, aren't they?
Thanks for coming over today!
Hey BBC...
Yeah, some ex's are like that!
Thanks for the visit today!
Hey Ben...
Didn't mean to mess up your lunch plans, buddy!
Mean for their size, aren't they?
Thanks for dropping by today!
Hey Linda...
Makes us realize that nature is full of surprises!
Enjoy the weather and thanks for coming by today!
Hey JoJo...
That's about how the weather is here in Houston!
I kinda figured you for a shrimp gal!
Thanks, sweetie, for the visit!
Look http://www.educatedearth.net/video.php?id=3366
Nature can be stranger than any science fiction.
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