Don't Mess with Me

The Strange Lives of Venomous Sea Creatures

11 February 2022

Territory Rights — Worldwide excluding Canada.

Paul Erickson (Author), Andrew Martinez (Photographs by)

Description

The role of venoms in nature … and in human medicine. Why are toxins so advantageous to their possessors as to evolve over and over again? What is it about watery environments that favors so many venomous creatures? Marine biologist Paul Erickson explore

Scorpions and brown recluse spiders are fine as far as they go, but if you want daily contact with venomous creatures, the ocean is the place to be. Blue-ringed octopi, stony corals, sea jellies, stonefish, lionfish, poison-fanged blennies, stingrays, cone snails, blind remipedes, fire urchins—you can choose your poison in the ocean. Venoms are often but not always defensive weapons. The banded sea krait, an aquatic snake, wriggles into undersea caves to prey on vicious moray eels, killing them with one of the world’s most deadly neurotoxins, which it injects through fangs that resemble hypodermic needles.

Paperback

9780884485520

206 x 257 mm • 48 pages

£7.99

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Standalone Ebook

9780884485537

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