3773 12.08.11
Once upon a time…

Once upon a time…

droool.

droool.

67 11.06.11
hahaha

hahaha

64511 11.06.11

LOL somehow this is strangely, kind of….cute.

Talk about a one-of-a-kind discovery—an extremely rare cyclops shark (pictured) has been confirmed in Mexico, new research shows.
The   22-inch-long (56-centimeter-long) fetus has a single, functioning eye   at the front of its head—the hallmark of a congenital condition called   cyclopia, which occurs in several animal species, including humans.
Earlier this year fisher Enrique Lucero León legally caught a pregnant dusky shark near Cerralvo Island (see map) in the Gulf of California. When León cut open his catch, he found the   odd-looking male embryo along with its nine normal siblings. “He said,   That’s incredible—wow,” said biologist Felipe Galván-Magaña, of the Interdisciplinary Center of Marine Sciences in La Paz, Mexico.
Once   Galván-Magaña and colleague Marcela Bejarano-Álvarez heard about the   discovery—which was put on Facebook—the team got León’s permission to   borrow the shark for research. The scientists then x-rayed the fetus and   reviewed previous research on cyclopia in other species to confirm  that  the find is indeed a cyclops shark.
Cyclops sharks have been documented by scientists a few times before, also as embryos, said Jim Gelsleichter,   a shark biologist at the University of North Florida in  Jacksonville.  The fact that none have been caught outside the womb  suggests cyclops  sharks don’t survive long in the wild.
Overall, finding such an unusual animal reinforces that scientists still have a lot to learn, Gelsleichter added.
“It’s a humbling experience to realize you ain’t seen it all yet.”

LOL somehow this is strangely, kind of….cute.

Talk about a one-of-a-kind discovery—an extremely rare cyclops shark (pictured) has been confirmed in Mexico, new research shows.

The 22-inch-long (56-centimeter-long) fetus has a single, functioning eye at the front of its head—the hallmark of a congenital condition called cyclopia, which occurs in several animal species, including humans.

Earlier this year fisher Enrique Lucero León legally caught a pregnant dusky shark near Cerralvo Island (see map) in the Gulf of California. When León cut open his catch, he found the odd-looking male embryo along with its nine normal siblings. “He said, That’s incredible—wow,” said biologist Felipe Galván-Magaña, of the Interdisciplinary Center of Marine Sciences in La Paz, Mexico.

Once Galván-Magaña and colleague Marcela Bejarano-Álvarez heard about the discovery—which was put on Facebook—the team got León’s permission to borrow the shark for research. The scientists then x-rayed the fetus and reviewed previous research on cyclopia in other species to confirm that the find is indeed a cyclops shark.

Cyclops sharks have been documented by scientists a few times before, also as embryos, said Jim Gelsleichter, a shark biologist at the University of North Florida in Jacksonville. The fact that none have been caught outside the womb suggests cyclops sharks don’t survive long in the wild.

Overall, finding such an unusual animal reinforces that scientists still have a lot to learn, Gelsleichter added.

“It’s a humbling experience to realize you ain’t seen it all yet.”

809 11.06.11
loveeee!

loveeee!

3955 11.06.11
okay seriously? how cute is this.

okay seriously? how cute is this.

1 08.10.11
clapyourhandssaykirsten:

My period will now be called shark week.
LOL

clapyourhandssaykirsten:

My period will now be called shark week.

LOL

56127 08.09.11