Great galloping crinoids: lilylike sea animal takes a brisk walk.A video has caught an underwater animal, which looks like a flower, practically jogging along the ocean bottom. The stalked crinoid spends most of its time sitting and catching food with the flowerlike wheel of feathery feath·er·y adj. 1. Covered with or consisting of feathers. 2. Resembling or suggestive of a feather, as in form or lightness. feath arms that have earned it and its relatives the nickname sea lilies. Scientists had known for decades that stalked crinoids sometimes move--but barely. They had been clocked at speeds no greater than 0.6 meter per hour. Now, however, a video from a submersible dive off Grand Bahama Island reveals a speed demon, says Tomasz Baumiller of the University of Michigan (body, education) University of Michigan - A large cosmopolitan university in the Midwest USA. Over 50000 students are enrolled at the University of Michigan's three campuses. The students come from 50 states and over 100 foreign countries. in Ann Arbor. A stalked crinoid pulled itself along the bottom briskly enough for a viewer to notice. Baumiller and Charles Messing of Nova Southeastern University's Oceanographic Center in Dania Beach, Fla., measured its pace at 140 in per hour. Baumiller presented the video in Salt Lake City on Oct. 16 at the annual meeting of the Geological Society of America The Geological Society of America (or GSA) is a nonprofit organization dedicated to the advancement of the geosciences. The society was founded in New York in 1888 by James Hall, James D. . (View it at www.sciencenews.org/articles/20051022/ crawler Also known as a "Web crawler," "spider," "ant," "robot" (bot) and "intelligent agent," a crawler is a program that searches for information on the Web. Crawlers are widely used by Web search engines to index all the pages on a site by following the links from page to page. .mov.) "People were speechless," says William I. Ausich of Ohio State University Ohio State University, main campus at Columbus; land-grant and state supported; coeducational; chartered 1870, opened 1873 as Ohio Agricultural and Mechanical College, renamed 1878. There are also campuses at Lima, Mansfield, Marion, and Newark. in Columbus. "It adds a whole new dynamic to understanding a very important group of animals." Crinoids, which are relatives of starfish and sea urchins, once had achieved such abundance and diversity that paleontologists refer to the period 350 million years ago as the age of crinoids. Today, only two main forms remain. Two decades ago, Baumiller and Messing independently documented movement by some stalked crinoids. Baumiller observed creeping stalks in a lab. Messing, among other observations, dove in a submersible to plot positions of individual crinoids in an ocean-bottom garden and returned months later to find that they had shifted. "The movement was so slow that no one got terribly excited," says Baumiller. The researchers suspected that crinoids flee from hungry sea urchins. So, Baumiller and Messing joined forces with an urchin specialist, Richard Mooi of the California Academy of Sciences The California Academy of Sciences is one of the ten largest natural history museums in the world, and one of the oldest in the United States of America. It is located in Golden Gate Park in San Francisco. in San Francisco. Looking through hundreds of hours of archived video documentation of submersible dives from the 1990s, the researchers found the sprinting crinoid at a depth of about 400 m. In the video, it lies on the bottom and pulls itself along with its arms, "like a soldier's elbow crawl," says Banmiller. Carlton Brett of the University of Cincinnati The University of Cincinnati is a coeducational public research university in Cincinnati, Ohio. Ranked as one of America’s top 25 public research universities and in the top 50 of all American research universities,[2] describes the locomotion locomotion Any of various animal movements that result in progression from one place to another. Locomotion is classified as either appendicular (accomplished by special appendages) or axial (achieved by changing the body shape). as "knuckle walking." He says that the speed was indeed a surprise, but that it fits into emerging scenarios suggesting that competition between crinoids and their predators influences each creature's evolution. |
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