When the female Sacculina barnacles invades a crab's body, she does so in an amorphous gelatinous form. She then sends roots throughout the crab's body and begins to feed on it while she grows into a tumorous growth. She even carves out a little spot (the barnacle equivalent of a studio apartment) for the male Sacculina so that she might have baby Sacculinas. But the barnacle doesn't stop there.
Photo source: hku.hk

Come on. I know all creatures need to make a living, but some just take it too far. Some parasites manage to be beneficial, and some become tongues. This one just owns its host in every conceivable way and then discards it. My neighbor has a mooching, parasitical son, who I now suspect might be a variant of the Sacculina barnacle.
Thanks for the link, anonymous.
another weird thing about these creatures is that they start out as little bug-like things that find a crab and look for a weak area like a leg joint. They stab their legs into the crab and INJECT THEMSELVES into it through their hollow appendage.
ReplyDeleteEww gross! Poor crab =(
ReplyDeleteYou have just got to be kidding on this one!
ReplyDeleteHoly smokes, and humans are supposed to be the superior species - we have nothing on this brilliant barnacle.
Poor crabs, but kudos to the unmatched self preservation of the barnacles.
These creatures are ugly in appearance, attitude and action. I just hope they never mutate into a land-based form. And thanks, Linty, for adding those delectable details.
ReplyDeleteI would go take a bath now, but I'm afraid of the water.
lol, I read about both this creepy parasite and the last one in Carl Zimmer's book "Parasite Rex"...I don't know why I didn't think of sending them in!
ReplyDeleteIf anyone else likes science that's still entertaining to read, it's a great, albeit somewhat frightening, book.
Meg,
ReplyDeleteDon't forget the parasitic trematodes that invade and coat fish brains. The invasion causes fish to swim near the water's surface, act jerkily, turn on their side and flash their light colored undersides. This makes them much easier prey for shore birds where the parasite will start the parasitic cycle again.
Or Dicrocoelium dendriticum, the lancet liver fluke, that manipulates an ant's nerves and causes them to climb tall grass blades and clamp on with their mandibles, hoping to be eaten by grazing animals in order to start the parasitic cycle again.
Or finally the fungus cordyceps that infects ants' brains, causes them to climb a tall tree, sink their mandibles into a branch then die, whereupon the fungus grows stalks out of the ant's body and releases spores that fall onto the forest floor in order to start the parasitic cycle again.
Parasites rule the world. Just look at Washington DC. :o)
And even more disturbing is the gordian worm that grows in its host (grasshoppers, locusts, and beetles) then compels the host to commit suicide by jumping in the water so it can emerge. It can also survive predation my crawling out the mouth or nose of the predator that ate its host. Disturbing videos of the gordian worm and cordyceps can be found here:
ReplyDeletehttp://neurophilosophy.wordpress.com/2006/11/20/brainwashed-by-a-parasite/
You've been warned.
gee anonymous, thanks for reminding me of everything else that was creepy (but fascinating) about the book ;)
ReplyDelete...urk...
ReplyDeleteholy crapface
ReplyDeleteWow... Totally sick! I only knew about cordyceps (a much beloved Chinese traditional medicine, yum!), gordy worm and the mind-control wasp as brain-masters from the sickth dimension.
ReplyDeletehttp://scottthong.wordpress.com/2006/10/30/mind-control-wasp/