Giant bug-like creatures capable of devouring a fully grown alligator have been found in the ocean
More under this adA new marine creature has been identified. Part of the isopod family, it looks like something out of a science fiction movie and is capable of devouring an alligator.
The sea harbours many strange creatures many of which are still a mystery to humans. Every now and then a never-seen-before species from the depths of the sea is stumbled upon by humans. These instances help us study the plethora of creatures that are still in hiding. One such creature was observed by the scientists as it devoured a whole alligator.
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A scavenger of the seas
But what is this animal that researchers recently discovered off the Pratas Islands, near Taiwan? According to their work, published this summer in the Journal of Natural History, it is a new species of giant isopod, or bathynome, called Bathynomus yucatanensis.
More under this adMore under this adBathynomes are giant crustaceans without a shell, similar to woodlice. Some of them, such as the Bathynomus giganteus, can easily measure around 50 centimetres.
A species that has gone unnoticed
The Bathynomus yucatanensis, on the other hand, was about 45 centimetres long. According to the researchers, these isopods act like scavengers and therefore pose no threat to humans. In 2019, a video in which giant isopods could be seen devouring an alligator corpse in 24 hours went viral. And the Bathynomus yucatanensis would be just as capable of getting rid of a reptile body that big.
More under this adMore under this adBecause of its similarity to its cousin, the Bathynomus giganteus, the Bathynomus yucatanensis was misidentified for many years. Both species have been found in the same locations and have a similar structure, but the Yucatanensis is thought to be significantly smaller. Analyses also showed that the two species were genetically different, even though they have a common ancestor.
More under this adMore under this adThis article was translated from Gentside FR.
Sources used:
Journal of Natural History- A new species of Bathynomus Milne-Edwards, 1879 (Isopoda: Cirolanidae) from the southern Gulf of Mexico with a redescription of Bathynomus jamesi Kou, Chen and Li, 2017 from off Pratas Island, Taiwan
NewYork Post- Recently discovered ‘sea bugs’ can grow up to 1.5 feet, eat entire alligator corpse
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