• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Stealthy Water Scorpions’ Most Unique Feature Does Something Very Weird

September 12, 2023 by Deborah Bloomfield

Which scorpion sounds like a scorpion, looks like a scorpion, but isn’t a scorpion? Why, it’s the water scorpion, of course, known scientifically as Nepa cinerea. These unique aquatic insects have some truly peculiar adaptations that have shaped them into stealthy underwater hunters with what’s effectively a snorkel sticking out of their butts.

Water scorpions are also known as Nepidae, a family of exclusively aquatic insects in the order Hemiptera, which includes the “true bugs”. That puts them alongside around 80,000 other species, including suicide-bombing aphids, bed bugs that skewer their mate’s abdomens with their penises, and assassin bugs who wear their victims’ corpses like a cloak of invisibility.

Advertisement

With such entomological freaks for order partners, you might think it’d be hard to stand out, but the water scorpion has a very distinctive feature in the form of a slender tail-like appendage that – given their name – looks a bit like a stinger. As it happens, it’s basically a snorkel.

Known as a siphon, the appendage can be pushed through the water to the surface to collect air that the water scorpion then stores under its wings for later use. Water scorpions walk through their aquatic habitats rather than swimming, so they trot along the shallow water’s edge, butts up, in search of prey.

They are proficient hunters in spite of their lack of swimming skills, relying on stealth and patience to ambush prey like tadpoles, insects, and occasionally even small fish. This is where the nickname starts to make sense, as they are armed with raptorial front legs that are perfect for snatching a reluctant meal.

The hunt is made all the easier for some water scorpions whose camouflaged bodies blend in seamlessly with aquatic environments that are wallpapered with the brown hues of rotting wood, decaying leaves, and silt. Combined with their scorpion-like forelimbs, these traits come together to create a stealthy underwater hunter that helps to balance the ecosystem by controlling population numbers of smaller prey species.

Advertisement

As it happens, there’s a whole host of benefits to predators in an ecosystem beyond their hunting prowess.

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. Paris ramps up security as jihadist attacks trial starts
  2. Cricket-‘Western bloc’ has let Pakistan down, board chief says
  3. Analysis-Diverse boards to pick the next Boston and Dallas Fed bank chiefs
  4. Ancient Bison Found In Permafrost Is So Well Preserved Scientists Want To Clone It

Source Link: Stealthy Water Scorpions' Most Unique Feature Does Something Very Weird

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • Did You Know The World’s Largest Waterfall Is Underwater?
  • Video Game Study Found Out What People Do When The World Ends, And It’s Exactly What You’d Expect
  • How Do We Predict The Weather? Find Out More In Issue 40 Of CURIOUS – Out Now
  • You Should Never Leave These Foods In Your Fridge Door (But We Bet You Do)
  • These Gullies On Mars Look Carved – We Might Finally Know What Created Them
  • Potential Environmental Trigger For Autism Identified, 3I/ATLAS’s Tail Appears To Have Changed Direction, And Much More This Week
  • Spaghetti Has Inner Secrets We’re Only Just Learning About
  • How Far Back In Time Could You Go And Still Understand English?
  • We Now Know How The First People Reached America – And It Wasn’t On Foot
  • Two Major Coral Species Now Functionally Extinct In Florida Keys, After Record-Breaking Marine Heatwave
  • A “Super-Earth” In The Habitable Zone Is Half The Distance To Comparable Worlds
  • Adorable But Critically Endangered Bornean Orangutan Born In Conservation Success
  • How Did The FDA Settle On The “2,000 Calories Per Day” Guideline?
  • Comet 3I/ATLAS Losing At Least Two Kangaroos’ Worth Of Dust Every Second
  • Mummified Dinosaur Duo Prove They Had Hooves, Marking “The First Confirmed Hooved Reptile”
  • What Do The Numbers On Your Toaster Really Mean?
  • NASA Vs. Elon Musk: Is A Moon Landing This Decade Off The Cards?
  • Scientists Explored Some Of The Deepest Parts Of The Ocean And Spotted Some Seriously Weird Deep-Sea Creatures
  • 500-Meter-Tall Megatsunami Struck Remote Alaskan Fjord After Massive Landslide
  • 3I/ATLAS, CKM Syndrome, And Mosquitoes’ Final Frontier
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version