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6711


Date: March 21, 2019 at 01:26:24
From: kay.so.or, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Prehistoric shrimp emerge from Australian desert after heavy rain

URL: https://www.treehugger.com/animals/prehistoric-shrimp-emerge-australian-desert-after-heavy-rain.html




Imagine millions of these slithering out from the mud? The eggs of this alien desert crustacean remain dormant for years, waiting for a bout of rain to hatch.

In the desert of Australia – land of all creatures wonderful and weird – dwells a remnant of prehistoric time, a crustacean known as a shield shrimp.

Triops australiensis, which looks like the love child of a horseshoe crab and a creature from the far side of the universe, belongs to a group of crustaceans called "branchiopods," meaning "gill feet" – because they have leaf-like, lobed feet, each housing a handy gill plate with which they breathe.
And while truly odd by our human standards, this is a fascinating organism, with eggs beautifully adapted to its environment. Given the dearth of water, the eggs can stay dormant underground for up to seven years or so, patiently waiting for enough rain to hatch – at which point millions of the little guys bloom from the mud.

Recently, a man named Nick Morgan posted some photos on the Northern Territory Parks and Wildlife Facebook page seeking an answer to what the heck he was seeing

Parks and Wildlife follower Nick Morgan sent in these photos of a mysterious bug he encountered near Alice Springs. It's a type of crustacean known as a Shield Shrimp, and there is one species in Australia, Triops australiensis.

The shrimp are well adapted to desert conditions as their eggs will remain dormant for years until there is significant rain, which triggers a population explosion.

Now is the best time to see the Shield Shrimp as the recent heavy rain in the Central Australia region has brought them to life.

"They can turn up in the absolute millions upon millions," expert Michael Barritt tells ABC Radio Darwin. But don’t let the name fool you. "They're not a true shrimp," he adds.

After feasting and laying new eggs before the arid desert conditions return, the species paves the way for the next flood-sparked generation, having adapted beautifully to its habitat.

"Forget about your average egg," Barritt says. "These are eggs that can dry out and get blown by the wind. They deal with all the kinds of extreme temperatures that inland Australia gets, including high temperatures and low temperatures at night in wintertime.”

It may not be a very illustrious life apart from that one watery hurrah, but seeing as how they come from a family that has been around for 350 million years, they may be having the last laugh.


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[6712] [6714]


6712


Date: March 22, 2019 at 13:20:32
From: Jeff/Lake Almanor,CA, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Prehistoric shrimp emerge from seasonal mud puddles in NV.

URL: https://www.kolotv.com/content/news/Pre-historic-creature-appears-in-Swan-Lake-417732463.html


Hi Kay,

This caught my attention, as way back then, when I bought a house in
Virginia City Highlands, NV.

The selling agent told me about a place nearby, where a seasonal mud
puddle, hosted prehistoric shrimp. I asked him if he would take me there,
and we went in my vehicle, since he drove a Cadillac, and I had a 4wheeler.

I only saw water in it during spring. Maybe only a one acer max depression,
filled with cobblestones. That area up there was some of the roughest
country as far as rocky I've lived in or around.

Anyway, this is the closest article and demographics of this species related
to my experience. Lemmon Valley is west of Reno, on the California/Nevada
Line. I was southeast of Reno up in the hills.


Responses:
[6714]


6714


Date: March 24, 2019 at 16:35:34
From: sequoia, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Triops_longicaudatus and Steamboat Springs

URL: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Triops_longicaudatus


Hi Jeff,

it is interesting to learn that "Two days after hatching, the Triops
has essentially completely taken the appearance of an adult."

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Triops_longicaudatus

Nature's wonders! What kind of formative energy fields are
generating such a quick, yet perfect, transformation?

Does the Triops also occur around Steamboat Springs NV? where I
am anticipating significant seismic energy of the really rattling kind
to appear perhaps opening new opportunities for mud puddles.

sequoia


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