| Query: martin kramer | Result: 427th of 874 | |
Scans from Scientific American - Hermissenda crassicornis.jpg
Subject: | Scans from Scientific American - Hermissenda crassicornis.jpg
| Poster: | Martin Kramer (mkramer@wxs.nl)
| |
File size : 149231 bytes
File date : 1999:07:22 09:00:00
Resolution: 1080x748
Jpeg process : Baseline
Posted Newsgroups: alt.binaries.pictures.animals
Posted Date: Fri, 14 May 1999 00:00:28 GMT |
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Scans from Scientific American - Hermissenda crassicornis.jpg
Some animals not seen every day in this group
Martin Kramer
mkramer@wxs.nl
http://home.wxs.nl/~mkramer/
filename=hermissenda_crassicornis.jpg
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(Caption) MARINE SNAIL, Hermissenda crassicornis, pictured in a seawater aquarium in this photograph made by Pierre A. Henkart of the National Cancer Institute, is about an inch and a half long. The two large oral tentacles are tactile and chemosensory organs; the smaller dorsal tentacles called rhinophores are thought to sense water movement. The animal's central nervous system is on the buccal crest just behind the rhinophores. The plumelike appendage covering the snail's back, the cerata, may serve, like gills, as gas-exchange organs. |
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