Showing posts with label sea slugs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sea slugs. Show all posts
Saturday, September 25, 2010

A haiku tribute to sea slugs and their discoverers

    Professor Robin Gill is one of the great unsung heroes who have truly enriched the human existence. He cannot be compared with say Fred Sanger (the scientist who is without doubt the greatest living Briton - and the only living double Nobel laureate). That is like comparing a pineapple with a mango (both wonderful in their own way) but his mangnum opus Rise Ye Sea Slugs touches the heart and soul of anyone who owns a copy (or who has borrowed a copy or has just seen it on a bookshelf or on a coffee table)

    Rise ye sea slugs is a collection of 1,000 haiku on the subject of the sea cucumber

    It is in tribute to this great work and of course to Jeff Goddard that I give you this haiku

    In tiny ocean

    Sea slug lives peacefully

    Brings joy to Goddard



    Bah! my haiku are worse than my poems and not in a McGonagall or MacIntyre "so bad they're brilliant way"

    Ah well, back to dirty limericks for me....Source URL: http://idontwanttobeanythingotherthanme.blogspot.com/search/label/sea%20slugs
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Sea Slug Scientific Serendipity (I do love the smell of alliteration in the morning

    A nudibranch if not the species in question


    I remember someone defining serendipity as looking for a needle in a haystack but finding the farmer’s daughter. This definition will hold for many but for a naturalist perhaps serendipity is finding a new species in your back yard (so to speak)

    According to Science Daily this is what happened to Jeff Goddard, project scientist with the Marine Science Institute at UC Santa Barbara.

    Goddard was working in the tide pools at Carpinteria Reef, in Carpinteria State Park, Calif., when he found a new species of nudibranch. Recognizing it as new, Goddard carefully documented the living specimen before preserving it and sending it off to Terrence M. Gosliner, an authority on the taxonomy of sea slugs at the California Academy of Sciences in San Francisco

    Gosliner named the new sea slug after Goddard when he described it -- and one other newly discovered species of California nudibranch -- in the Proceedings of the California Academy of Sciences.


    Not much of a story if you are not interested in sea molluscs of the gastropode sort but I would be as pleased as Punch (but only half as handsome, sadly!)

    It does provide an excuse for my next post tooSource URL: http://idontwanttobeanythingotherthanme.blogspot.com/search/label/sea%20slugs
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