Freakish undersea critter: What””””s a””Flying spaghetti monster?
It is a group of aquatic animals that include jellyfish, hydroids and corals.
Most other Cystonects also possess a nectosome, a collection of zooids that work to allow the creature to move through the water.
Actually, workers with the oil and gas company BP found the creature while collecting some video footage of the ocean floor approximately 4,000 feet below sea level, using remotely operated underwater vehicles (ROV). It looks like a bowl of noodles turned upside down underwater.
Pastafarianism, recognized in any other case as the faith associated to the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster, is a spiritual view which contradicts and opposes the educating of clever design and creationism in public faculties. The website that informed about the creature’s origin was founded by Casey Dunn, an associate professor of ecology and evolutionary biology at Brown University in Rhode Island.
Similar to corals, the spaghettilike B. conifer is made up of many different multicellular organisms known as zooids. Only some can eat and only some can reproduce. According to data on siphonophores, one zooid develops from a fertilized egg; this starts the process and other zooids form out of the original one until they form an entire animal.
Its worshippers say this invisible and undetectable supernatural entity created the universe but a team of BP workers claims to have captured the mythical Flying Spaghetti Monster on video.
The deep-sea “spaghetti monster” is a particular kind of siphonophore, belonging to the suborder Cystonectae, according to the World Register of Marine Species.
Peculiarly, each of this zooids are employed with specific tasks. These lifeforms are marked by two main body parts, connected by a long stem.
The footage is rare – several B. conifer specimens have been observed, but never before in their natural habitats.
Some of the zooids that compose B.
The long “noodly appendages” extending from the bulbous clump of “spaghetti” are used to catch food. Pugh deduced that it was a specimen of Bathyphysa conifera after noticing that the tentacles of the filmed creature did not have side branches.
A namesake website is dedicated to these odd animals. Munro (who happens to be a big fan of siphonophores) said she thinks the so-called spaghetti monster is “really good looking”.