The yeti crab, discovered in 2011, grows hair-like structures on its claws that harbor bacteria colonies, which it deliberately harvests and consumes as its primary food source, essentially farming bacteria in the deep-sea environment miles below the ocean surface.
Deep Dive
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Deep Dive
Yeti Crab Farms Bacteria On 10,000 Foot Deep Claws #ShortsAdded:
Deep sea creatures scavenge scraps from the surface.
The yeti crab discovered in 2011 rewrote that rule completely.
This pale creature grows hair-like structures on its claws, seeding [music] them with bacteria colonies.
But marine biologists were amazed.
The crab doesn't eat these bacteria accidentally. It deliberately harvests them like crops.
The crab is essentially a rancher in complete darkness, miles below the ocean surface.
What [music] do you think other deep-sea creatures might be farming down there?
So next time someone says deep-sea life just scavenges, [music] remind them some creatures figured out agriculture before humans existed.
Follow Odd Earth for daily science.
[music]
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