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But this was completely worth the risk....
No this was my first attempt. I've had this peacock mantis for a few weeks now and I have never heard or seen her snap once the entire time so I'm pretty confident in her demeanor.have you been punched before?
Hey, like people have said before: “my dog doesn’t bite”. Until it did……No this was my first attempt. I've had this peacock mantis for a few weeks now and I have never heard or seen her snap once the entire time so I'm pretty confident in her demeanor.
Meanwhile my wennerae mantis I've had for 2 years is an absolute death machine and I would never, ever put my hand in front of it even though it's half her size, because I know it's going to hit me.
Hey, like people have said before: “my dog doesn’t bite”. Until it did……
Yeah… your friends are right
No way would I put my hand in that tank. The fact they pack the punch of a 22 caliber bullet is enough for me. I’m good. At the end of the day it’s a shrimp. I don’t think they have capacity to distinguish friend vs foe.
That was the most in-depth and nerdy response! Love itWith an acceleration rate which causes water to spontaneously cavitate, and generates forces exceeding 500 Newtons (KgM/S^2), I’m not doing any experiments using my appendages, thank you. They are still wild animals and subject to their own whims.
Aka- thumb splitter
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Extreme impact and cavitation forces of a biological hammer: strike forces of the peacock mantis shrimp Odontodactylus scyllarus
SUMMARY. Mantis shrimp are renowned for their unusual method of breaking shells with brief, powerful strikes of their raptorial appendages. Due to the extreme speeds of these strikes underwater, cavitation occurs between their appendages and hard-shelled prey. Here we examine the magnitude and...journals.biologists.com
With an acceleration rate which causes water to spontaneously cavitate, and generates forces exceeding 500 Newtons (KgM/S^2), I’m not doing any experiments using my appendages, thank you. They are still wild animals and subject to their own whims.
Aka- thumb splitter
![]()
Extreme impact and cavitation forces of a biological hammer: strike forces of the peacock mantis shrimp Odontodactylus scyllarus
SUMMARY. Mantis shrimp are renowned for their unusual method of breaking shells with brief, powerful strikes of their raptorial appendages. Due to the extreme speeds of these strikes underwater, cavitation occurs between their appendages and hard-shelled prey. Here we examine the magnitude and...journals.biologists.com
I love these animals and part of that love means I like to dispel myths about them. They are not nearly as dangerous as their reputation might have you to believe in most cases.When did Sir Isaac Newton join ARC?![]()
All good man, I was just meaning you guys have some serious physics skillsI love these animals and part of that love means I like to dispel myths about them. They are not nearly as dangerous as their reputation might have you to believe in most cases.