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Ghoulish gallery of Halloween horror animals

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Gaborn

Member
It’s not just ghosts and goblins that will give you a scare this Halloween - the animal kingdom puts on quite a horrifying show. New Scientist picks our fright-night favourites from the gross to the downright gory, zombie cockroaches brought back from the dead to a lizard that squirts tears of blood. And you thought your Halloween costume was scary.

Which creature chills your bones the most? Vote for your favourite horror species in our Facebook poll.

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Vampire fish show their teeth

A tinier and more voracious version of the candiru - the parasitic fish famous for finding its way into the orifices of unsuspecting bathers - has been discovered in Brazil. The fish, which does not yet have a name, seems to feed exclusively on the blood of its victims.
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(Image: Max Gibbs/Oxford Scientific/Getty)

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Heat-seeking vampire bats have a trick in their pits

Vampire bats use heat detection to seek out their next meal, and the way they do it provides the latest evidence that they are more closely related to the cattle whose blood they suck than the rodents they resemble.
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(Image: Oxford Scientific/Getty)

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'Horror frog' breaks own bones to produce claws

Hairy frogs from the Cameroon have revealed a remarkable mechanism that causes thorn-like claws to burst through the skin when it is threatened. Trichobatrachus robustus actively breaks its own bones to produce claws that puncture their way out of the frog's toe pads.
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(Image: Gustavocarra)

NOTE: In 2008 I made a thread on this story.

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Horror fly returns from the dead

The bone skipper, which feeds on rotten flesh and was the first fly to be declared extinct because of human activity, made a surprise comeback last year after having not been seen for more than 160 years. The fly is active only during the winter months and reportedly emits a luminous glow from its large, orange head.
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(Image: Daniel Martín-Vega)

NOTE: In 2010 I made a thread on this story.

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Keep freeloaders happy with rotting corpses

Pretty name, not-so-pretty domestic arrangements. The golden orb-weaving spider Nephila clavipes has the unpleasant habit of weaving rotting insect carcasses into its web. What possesses it? The gruesome behaviour isn't unique: many spiders add cadavers to their web designs. Some studies suggest the whiff of rotting carrion is designed to lure insects to their doom, whereas others conclude that the corpses ward off predators.
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(Image: Victor Patel)

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Virus gene engineer sends caterpillars to a sticky end

It takes just one gene to rule them all. With that gene, a voodoo virus compels its caterpillar hosts to emerge from their shady hideaways, climb en masse to the tops of trees, deliquesce and fall as a rosy rain of viral particles on their fellow healthy caterpillars. Soon, they too will make the climb of doom. The virus is known as baculovirus and its unsuspecting host the gypsy moth caterpillar.
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(Image: Joke Stuurman-Huitema/Foto Natura/Minden/Getty)

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World's nicest bird murders chicks

Newly hatched greater honeyguide chicks emerge into pitch darkness, inside a tunnel dug by another bird where their mother has left them. They will soon be joined by the host bird's own chicks when they hatch. If this was a slasher movie, now would be the time to cover your eyes. The young honeyguide kills the other chicks within an hour. All this from a bird that as an adult helpfully guides humans to bees' nests, which the humans then raid for honey.
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(Image: Claire Spottiswoode)

NOTE: I made a thread on this a bit over a month ago

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Mummy, can I have some more carrion soup?

Squeamish readers might want to look away: this is a tale of decaying corpses, regurgitation and feasting on putrefaction. It is also an account of some excellent parenting skills. We've all seen baby birds begging their parents for food. The larvae of the burying beetle Nicrophorus vespilloides do it too, only their diet is… well, slightly different.
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(Image: Per Terje Smiseth)

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Slime killer hagfish feasts in rotten flesh

Imagine you're a humble little red bandfish. One day, minding your own business, you suddenly find yourself drenched in sticky mucus. You can't breathe, because it has clogged your gills. Your enemy is a hagfish. After you're dead it will drag you out of your burrow and devour you. But it's unlikely anyone will try to devour it in turn, because that slime it used to kill you also protects it from predators. Besides, why would anyone want to eat a creature that regularly eats decaying corpses from the inside out?
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(Image: Zintzen et al., Scientific Reports)

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Zombie cockroaches revived by brain shot

There is a cure for zombies after all - if you are a cockroach. A study has shown that cockroaches that turned into "zombies" after being stung by a parasitic wasp can be revived by injecting them with neurotransmitters. Cockroaches can lose their ability to walk when stung by jewel wasps (Ampulex compressa) - the females of which use the cockroaches to feed their young.
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(Image: Rosenberg, et al., Journal of Experimental Biology)

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Chemical warfare, insect style

Chemical warfare is frowned upon in most human societies, but to animals it's routine. Bombardier beetles have glands in their abdomens which can shoot rapid-fire pulses of hot caustic liquid. Each gland has two chambers, one containing a mixture of hydroquinones and hydrogen peroxide, the other various enzymes. When the two are mixed, a series of explosive reactions occur, including the conversion of hydrogen peroxide into oxygen and water. These reactions heat the mixture to boiling point and blast it out of the beetle's backside with an audible pop.
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(Image: Satoshi Kuribayashi/Nature Production/OSF/Photolibrary)/Getty)

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Horror lizard squirts tears of blood

Around 7 centimetres long, the beast looks like a small armoured dinosaur that has been put in a trouser press. Its body is flattened to the ground, helping to disguise it, as does its mottled skin. Spines run down the side of the body and tail, and sprout all over the head – including two large ones on the top that look like horns. The lizard can also defend itself from predators by squirting a jet of blood out of its eyes. This rather extreme weapon confuses the predator and allows the lizard to escape.
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(Image: Raymond Mendez/AnimalsAnimals/OSF/Photolibrary)

NOTE: I made a thread on this at the time

Gallery Here
 

Trojita

Rapid Response Threadmaker
Hairy frogs from the Cameroon have revealed a remarkable mechanism that causes thorn-like claws to burst through the skin when it is threatened. Trichobatrachus robustus actively breaks its own bones to produce claws that puncture their way out of the frog's toe pads.

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Gaborn

Member
Clydefrog said:
Ffuuuuuuuuuuuu

It's the spider isn't it. It's ALWAYS the spider. Although personally the vampire fish (smaller AND hungrier than the candiru? YIKES) and the Bombardier beetle are terrifying.

Btw, I thought this was interesting from the full article on the spider:

Mystery solved? Not quite: insects in the traps near webs were on average much smaller than those in the web-free section. In fact, the decay-loving insects caught near webs are so small – all with a body shorter than 2.5 millimetres – that Nephila finds them too fiddly to eat.

So why attract them at all, and why go to the trouble of weaving them into your web? Some spiders regularly eat their webs, including any tiny morsels caught in it, before building a new one – but not Nephila.

It seems Nephila is stocking its web with food for a freeloader. Argyrodes, the dewdrop spider, hangs out on Nephila webs and tries to steal the host's catch. Hénaut and team conclude that the whole corpse-weaving rigmarole is designed to feed Argyrodes. Nephila, they argue, goes to these extraordinary lengths to keep its unwanted web mates happy so that it can enjoy any larger insects that fall onto its web in peace.

Nature is amazing.
 
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