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Anonymous
>> Anonymous
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I'm from Buenos Aires, and i say kill'em all!
>> Anonymous
>>80660
no you arent and no you dont
>> Anonymous
so...do they bite?

Could i potentially train one to be my hairdresser?

IS THIS POSSIBILITY?
>> Anonymous
Kabuto.
>> Anonymous
>>80660

The only good bug is a dead bug.
>> Anonymous
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Madness!
>> Anonymous
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Blashpemy!
>> Anonymous
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AND MADNESS!
>> Anonymous
GTH with those ugly things >_<
>> Anonymous
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You know what this is? Sure you do... You're a big fat smart bug, aren't you?
>> Anonymous
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The bugs use some kind of plasma burst
>> Anonymous
>>80713
WHAT IN FUCK
OH GOD
WHAT IS THAT D:
>> Nagi
>>80877

Megalograptus, an extinct sea scorpion from way back in the Orodovician Period some 488 million years ago. Specifically, this pic is some behind the scenes shot of a Megalograptus prop from a BBC mini-series from the creators of Walking with Dinosaurs, titled Chased by Sea Monsters. It featured zoologist Nigel Marvin going on some imaginary journey through the seven deadliest seas in Earth's history (of which the Ordovician placed seventh, I believe).

Really good show. Was released in the US packaged with a couple Walking with Dinosaurs specials on a DVD titled "Chased by Dinosaurs."
>> Anonymous
>>80883
There's a lot of isopods still alive today-
the "giant isopod" can be found in the deep waters of the Atlantic and Pacifi oceans. They're actually thought to be abundant down there.

Or so wikipedia tells me.
>> Anonymous
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They are relatively stupid by human standards. Workers have an IQ of 12, warriors around 35 , and yet the Arachnids have colonized planets. Over a million years of evolution, Nature has provided the Arachnids with the biological means to hurl their spore into space.
>> Anonymous
could someone tell me what the fuck these things are?!
>> Anonymous
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>>80865

:/
>> Nagi
>>81007

Euryptid =/= Isopod
>> Anonymous
lol@ obscure movie references.

also...

TANKER!
>> Gunlord !.YMO7aNBcQ
>>81013
What's this? Doesn't look like a sea scorpion, but it's definitely not an Isopod...
>> Anonymous
>>81037
it's a serolid isopod.
Isopods include like 20 different family groups but this one looks really different because it's from the arctic or some shit so it became really flat compared to other isopods.
>> Anonymous
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not really isopod but itsy bitsy horseshoe crab :D
>> Anonymous
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aw yuck
fishtongue parasitic isopod disturbing image ahoy
>> Anonymous
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>> Anonymous
>>80713
Extinct Sea Scorpion (Its been shooped)
>>80864
And this is a triop, a three eyed desert shrimp.
You can buy them at some stores.
>> Anonymous
>>81122
Seriously now, it that thing real or not?
Wtf is it?

Does it really exists, I mean, that fucking tongue. It's like fucking "Alien", what the hell.

Could someone provide a link to explains that creature..??

Holy shit, that's a first to me.
>> HarblongCassidy !KzfKdB2Xmc
>>81118

My favorite sea critter.

The horseshoe crab, not the small child.
>> Anonymous
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>>81154
there are a bunch of parasitic isopods in the sea there are sometimes smaller versions located in fishmouths this particular one grows kind of large replacing the tongue of the fish. i guess its things like these that inspire giger...

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cymothoa_exigua
http://news.bbc.co.uk/cbbcnews/hi/newsid_4200000/newsid_4209000/4209004.stm
http://cars.er.usgs.gov/posters/Coastal_Ecology/Parasitic_Isopod/parasitic_isopod.html
>> Anonymous
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Speaking of horseshoe crabs, is this real?

The horseshoe crab, not the fat guy.
>> ??
GAMERA CRAB.
>> Anonymous
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>>81179
<- reminds me of this picture lol
the shell looks a bit too metallic to me?
they are said to grow up to the size of a dinnerplate at its highest i think its save to say both pictures are fake...
>> Anonymous
lol people who don't see many ocean arthropods
>> Anonymous
>>81179
>>81185

Nothing with an exoskeleton could grow to that size. It's physically impossible.
>> Anonymous
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>>81192
Eurypterida grew pretty big.
>> Anonymous
>>81192
It's physically impossible on land
>>81195
they could back then because there was much more oxygen in the air. simplistic lungs like arthropods have are limited in how much flesh they can support by the concentration of the air they breathe.
>> Anonymous
>>81195
I don't think ancient scorpions held their tails in that posture..
>> Anonymous
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talk about creepy sea crusteans how about a mantis shrimp?
>> Anonymous
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>>80304
<- i swear there is a resemblance somewhere lol