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Anonymous
Mutant shark with legs. :-(
>> Nonny-Moose
mutant...or evolution?!
>> Anonymous
gimme a story
>> Anonymous
Penang, Malaysia (Mar 14, 2007 14:28 EST) Has anyone ever seen a baby shark with webbed feet? A worker of the Malaysian Fisheries Development Board (LKIM) in Batu Maung, Penang, made this unusual find when she was given the 1.7kg fish by a fisherman at the jetty recently.

Mary Looi, 48, said she only realised the shark was different when she wanted to cook tomyam fish for lunch for her family.

“It was only when I was about to cut the shark the day after I received it that I found two webbed feet sticking out from the lower part of the body.
Endless Pools

“The shark is one-metre long,” she said.

Looi said she dared not cook the fish after consulting her husband Gooi Man Kaw, 57, who told her that according to Chinese belief, eating fish with unusual features could bring disaster or ill luck.

“Immediately, I returned the fish to the fisherman that night at about 10pm.

“He threw it back into the sea,” said Looi.

Looi, who has been working at LKIM for 10 years, said this was the first time she had stumbled upon such an unusual find.

When contacted, Universiti Sains Malaysia (USM) Muka Head marine research station head Prof Dr Zulfigar Yasin said this is the first time he had heard of fish with legs found in the Malaysian waters.

“There is a possibility that the fish could have swum from other waters into Malaysian waters.

“As far as I am concerned, fish species with legs or bony fins can only be discovered in the waters of North Sulawesi in Indonesia or South Africa,” he said.

http://www.underwatertimes.com/news.php?article_id=73210864950
>> Anonymous
JAWSOME!!!
>> Anonymous
>>125542
well since it looks like the "legs" are mutated (or mutilated) claspers, something tells me that shark will not be reproducing. no evolution for that short lived species of hybrid leg shark monsters.
>> Anonymous
>>125542
uh oh... the age of man is soon over!
>> Anonymous
sounds like BS. convenient that she had it thrown back into the water.
>> Anonymous
sharks - true rulorz of teh woold
>> Anonymous
SNAIL IN MY BLADDER!!!111!!1
>> Anonymous
Good thing it wasn't opposable thumbs.
>> Anonymous
>>126046

It's more likely than you think.
>> Anonymous
     File :-(, x)
>> Anonymous
There is always gonna be a fish in a man's penis.
>> Anonymous
Holy shit!
in 50 years those fuckers gona take over the world!
KILL IT WITH FIRE!!!
>> Anonymous
Oh lol, it's originally a picture of a lady holding chikkinz I should know
>> Anonymous
It's clearly fake, and shopped by someone with no knowledge of evolutionary biology.

The evolutionary tree goes: Fish - Amphibians - Reptiles - Mammals. The so called legs on the shark are clearly bent like mammalian legs. It is absolutely impossible for a mutation to cause that much change in an animal and jump billions of years ahead in evolution.

A shark like that wouldn't be able to swim and would have died as a baby a long time ago before ever getting "caught".
>> Anonymous
I agree with Anonymous!!!
Holy shit!
in 50 years those fuckers gona take over the world!
KILL IT WITH FIRE!!!
>> Anonymous
>>126400
god this is wrong in so many levels... where did you learn science? chick tracts?
>> dip
uhm.... since male sharks are 'double featured' (in case they lose one in battle, they can still procreate with the other), wouldn't it make more sense to belive it was a shark with mutated genitialia?
>> Anonymous
This would be way awesome if those weren't the shark equivalent of penis. Yeah, they have two.

In b4 "I'M A SHAAARK! SUCK MY DIIIICKS!"
>> BONER SHARK! BONER SHARK! LOL! Anonymous
http://cephalopodcast.com/blog/2007/03/15/malaysian-shark-with-webbed-feet

The Underwatertimes has an article that purports to show a baby shark with webbed feet. Looks more like the myxopterygia (i.e., claspers, intromittent organs, valva) of an adult reef shark.

myxopterygium (mix-op-ter-ridge-ee-um): The copulatory organ or clasper of Elasmobranchii and Holocephali; rod-like extensions of the inner side of the pelvic fins. It is composed of the long stem cartilage, a shorter distal cartilage, the dorsal terminal cartilage (or rhipidion, fan-shaped for dispersing sperm in a radiating spray during copulation), the hook-shaped terminal cartilage (or claw) which has a cutting edge on its inner margin, and the narrow, sharp spur. The claw and spur serve to anchor the clasper in the female oviduct and a groove along the clasper enables the sperm to reach the oviduct. The siphon contracts to propel sperm into the oviduct.

So basically, this shark died with an erection.
>> Anonymous
>>126400
I don't even know where to begin with your lack of knowledge about evolution... or your lack of knowledge about the shark's two penises. It's not his fault he died with a hard on for the world to see.
>> Anonymous
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