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The variety of seafood in Dalian includes fish, prawns, clams, crabs, scallops, sea urchins, oysters, sea cucumbers, mussels, lobsters, conches, abalone, algae, razor clams, urechis unicinctus, mantis shrimps, jellyfish and so on.
It is widely referred to as the fat innkeeper worm or the penis fish.
Penis fish can refer to:
It gets the name "fat innkeeper worm" because the tunnels it creates often contain other animals.
Other sharks examined have had stomachs containing whole innkeeper worms with no bite marks, suggesting that the sharks sucked them out of their burrows.
Individuals have been observed sucking innkeeper worms out of their burrows, and swimming around with the antennae of large lobsters sticking out of their mouths for hours.
This shark consumes a wide variety of fishes and invertebrates, including spiny dogfish, cod, sand perch, blennies, octopus, squid, gastropods, innkeeper worms, krill, hermit crabs, crabs, spiny lobsters, and even sea squirts.
For example, in the Elkhorn Slough at Monterey Bay, cancrid crabs and innkeeper worms are mostly eaten in winter and spring, fish eggs from winter to early summer, bony fish in summer, and grapsid crabs and clams in fall.
In some places, this species feeds only on a few prey types and little else (e.g. innkeeper worms and cancrid crabs in Tomales Bay, jack silverside (Atherinopsis californiensis) eggs and the crabs Romaleon antennarium and Metacarcinus magister in Humboldt Bay).
The jackdaws and spoon worms have forced me to change my mind.
The Echiura, or spoon worms, are a small group of marine animals.
And it's not true for green spoon worms.
They accumulate nearby in little piles, the presence of which may show where these spoon worms are buried.
This spoon worm is commonly eaten raw with salt and sesame oil in Korea.
Listriolobus pelodes is a species of marine spoon worm.
A spoon worm can move from one location to another by extending its proboscis and grasping some object before pulling the body forward.
A number of other invertebrates take up occupation in this spoon worm's burrow and live there as commensals.
The bodies of spoon worms are generally cylindrical with two wider regions separated by a narrower region.
Some spoon worms live in U-shaped tunnels in sand, mud or other soft substrate.
Other spoon worms conceal themselves in rock crevices, empty gastropod shells, sand dollar tests and similar places.
We're not like green spoon worms or elephant seals, with males and females so different that aspiring to an egalitarian society would be ludicrous.
Echiura (an order of polychaete ringed worms, the spoon worms)
When this is sufficiently clogged up, the spoon worm moves forward along its burrow devouring the net and the trapped particles.
After several developmental stages over a period of about six months, the larvae settle on the seabed and undergo metamorphosis into juvenile spoon worms.
While the proboscis of a spoon worm is on the surface it is at risk of predation by bottom-feeding fish.
Other cephalopods, bony fishes, small rock lobsters, spoon worms, and seagrass have also been found amongst its stomach contents.
The seafloor here is dominated by the spoon worm, an animal that burrows and licks organic matter off the sea bottom with its tonguelike proboscis.
The mud contains spoon worms which have "brains in their long tongues, which extend out of the burrows in search of food."
From spoon worms and piranhas to giraffes and orangutans, the author writes about wild creatures in a way that makes them seem both strange and familiar.
Typical spoon worms, including Bonellia, are suspension feeders, projecting their proboscis out of their burrows, with the gutter projecting upwards.
The spoon worm is preyed on by bottom feeding fish such as flounders, Dover sole (Microstomus pacificus) and bat rays (Myliobatis californicus).
In the early 1950s, Filice and co-workers investigated levels of amino acids in the body tissues of various marine invertebrates including seastars, sea urchins and spoon worms.
Male green spoon worms live inside a female's reproductive tract to fertilize passing eggs; they reach it by getting close enough to the females, who are 200,000 times their size, to be inhaled.
He's so different from his mate that when he was first discovered by science, he was not recognized as being a green spoon worm; instead, he was thought to be a parasite.