Date: June 18, 2019
Source: Florida Museum of Natural History
Feet from
the raw bars and sherbet-colored condominiums of Florida's Cedar Key,
researchers discovered a new species of egg-sucking sea slug, a rare outlier in
a group famous for being ultra-vegetarians.
Named Olea
hensoni in honor of Muppets creator Jim Henson, the slug belongs to the
sacoglossans, a group of more than 300 species that are such enthusiastic
eaters of plants that many of them turn green and some resemble leaves. A few
species, nicknamed "solar-powered slugs," have even developed the
ability to keep algae alive inside their bodies to photosynthesize their food
for them, becoming a fusion of plant and animal.
But O.
hensoni has gone rogue, joining two other sacoglossan species -- Olea
hansineensis from the northeast Pacific and Calliopaea
bellula in the Mediterranean -- that abandoned a diet of seaweed to prey
on the eggs of their fellow slugs and snails.
"In
the middle of this group of super-herbivores, there are a couple of species
that have rebelled in 'The Hills Have Eyes' kind of way and have gone almost
full-blown cannibal," said Patrick Krug, professor of biological sciences
at California State University. "These are like the Venus fly traps of the
slug world. They've switched from being harmless, friendly creatures to predators."
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