#sargassos
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makingsenseofwhathappened · 3 months ago
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“Justice," she said. "I've heard that word. It's a cold world. I tried it out," she said, still speaking in that low voice. "I wrote it down. I wrote it down several times and always it looked like a damn cold lie to me. There is no justice.” — Jean Rhys, Wide Sargasso Sea
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viscericorde · 6 months ago
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sargasso the drowned, witch of bitter waters
i wanted to design a character inspired by sargassum algae. she is probably hiding gills under that neck scarf
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beaft · 1 month ago
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HELLO. YOU APPEAR TO HAVE EXCELLENT TASTE. WOULD YOU PERCHANCE SHARE A FEW BOOKS OR STORIES OF THE FICTIONAL VARIETY THAT YOU HAVE ENJOYED? HAVE A SLAPPIN REST OF YOUR DAY
ah thank you sm - i would be very happy to!!! i don't know what your preferences are so here's a mix of books/stories/poems of various different genres that i have recently read (or reread):
"the swords" by robert aickman (short horror story)
"my sad dead" by mariana enriquez (another short horror story - link is paywalled, but you can bypass that by going to 12ft.io)
"wide sargasso sea" by jean rhys (novel. i reread this while waiting for a job interview because they had a copy in the staffroom and i was bored. glad i did because it made me remember how wonderful it is)
"bardskull" by martin shaw (this was marketed as a memoir but it's kind of unclassifiable. guy goes into the woods, experiences visions, and engages in dialogues with a variety of folkloric figures. definitely not for everyone but if you enjoy slightly oblique + experimental storytelling by an author who is Doing Stuff With Language you'll probably be into it)
"lizzie's tiger" by angela carter (short story - can't find a link to it online, sorry! but it's good i promise!)
"exhalation" by ted chiang (collection of short speculative fiction. kind of reads like an extended thought experiment. i loved nearly every story in this anthology which is really rare for me)
"ming" by patricia highsmith (short story from the perspective of a delightful cat)
"knots" by r d laing (poems. or dialogues. scenarios? logic puzzles? i don't really know how to describe these - you kind of just have to read them)
"the trees" by percival everett (crime novel… kind of. it's complicated.)
enjoy!!!
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deargodsno · 10 months ago
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So, if you think you're desperate, New Zealand eels have to swim through the South Atlantic Ocean, round the bottom of Africa, then up past most of South America, in order to have sex and breed. No wonder it's a once in a lifetime thing.
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teenaged-athena · 1 year ago
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my favourite literary genre is when a woman goes absolutely insane in first person narration - i'm right there with you girlie
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ashtreegt · 15 days ago
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g/t july day 18/19: "accidental" injury
(part 1)
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bethanythebogwitch · 6 months ago
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Wet Beast Wednesday: American eel
It's time for an American creature that is notoriously slimy and slippery. No, it's not our politicians this time, this one actually makes the world a better place. It's the American eel, an eelongated fish with an eelaborate lifecycle. Sadly, human activity has made this once-common critter much more eelusive, to the point it may go extinct. Allow me to eelaborate about this exceellent fish (ok I'll stop).
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(Image: an American eel resting on a muddy bottom. It is a long, snake-like fish with a fin running down the rear 2/3rds of the body and around the tail to the underside. There are two small pectoral fins near the head. The head is pointed and the jaws have prominent lips. The lower jaw just out beyond the upper jaw. It it a light brown in color, fading to white in the underside. End ID)
American eels (Anguilla rostrata) are long, slender ray-finned fish of the family Anguillidae, the freshwater eels. It is fairly typical of a member of that family. The body is cylindrical, like that of a snake's and the dorsal, tail, and anal fins have combined into one long fin that runs down the back, around the tail, and along the underside at the rear of the body. They also have a pair of pectoral fins behind the head. The head is pointed, with long jaws, the lower jaw being longer than the upper. Unlike most eels. which have lost their scales entirely, the Anguillidae still have scales embedded in the skin, but they are so small it is hard to notice them at all. The scales grow in irregular rows and do not overlap, unlike most fish scales. The body produces a thick, protective mucus coating. American eels can grow up to 1.2 meters (4ft) and 7.5 kg (17lbs), with females growing larger than males.
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(Image: a close up of an eel's head, showing off the robust lower jaw and the eye. End ID)
American eels have one of the broadest range of habitats of any fish. They live in freshwater and estuaries along the eastern coast of North and Central America as well as northern parts of South America, the Caribbean islands, and southern Greenland. They primarily inhabit rivers and streams as well as and connected lakes and ponds and can range far inland, especially along the Mississippi River. They are predators with a wide diet, feeding on fish, crayfish, worms, fish eggs, amphibians, and dead animals. As with most eels, they are nocturnal and spend their days hiding in burrows or in areas sheltered by rocks, plants, or other structures. American eels are highly mobile and will travel vast distances through their lives. They can move against currents, up slopes, and across wet grasses or short distances of land and young eels are capable of climbing rocks and waterfalls. Some populations will migrate out to coastal areas during the spring and summer and swim upriver for winter. Other populations remain in freshwater or estuaries all year round. During winter, they will bury themselves in the sediment and hibernate until spring.
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(Image: the head of an American eel poking out of a burrow in pebbly sediment. End ID)
For a long time, the life cycle of freshwater eels was a mystery. They seem to just appear as young eels with no sign of eggs or larvae. Aristotle thought the European eel (also in the family Anguillidae) were mature earthworms and that they appeared out of damp soil instead of reproducing. It was also believed for a long time that they couldn't reproduce as scientists, including Sigmund Freud (yes, that Sigmund Freud) dissected dozens of European eels without finding eggs or reproductive organs. The answer to eel reproduction came later. Freshwater eels, including the American eel, are catadromous, meaning they spend most of their lives in freshwater but migrate out to salt water to reproduce. Sexually mature American eels all travel to the same place to reproduce: the Sargasso Sea. The Sargasso Sea is a unique location in the Atlantic Ocean, a calm location bordered by currents and known for vast amounts of floating Sargassum seaweed. We know that the eels travel in massive numbers to reach the sea and mate all at roughly the same time, but we don't fully know exactly when or were their spawning ground is. They probably mate in massive conglomerations where fertilization is uniform and random, something called panmixia. The eggs likely take a few weeks to hatch and will hatch all around the same time. Large females can release up to 8.5 million eggs. They mate only once and die afterwards, a characteristic called semelparity.
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(image: an eel resting on rocky sediment. This one is a darker grey color than in the first picture. End ID)
Eels have a type of larva called a leptocephalus. These larvae are thin and leaf-shaped, with translucent bodies that make them hard to spot. American eel larvae are carried by the Gulf Stream into the Gulf of Mexico and then around Florida and up along the eastern coast of North America. This can take up to a year. Once the larvae are carried over the continental shelf, they metamorphose into glass eels. In this stage, they now take on the typical eel shape, but are still translucent, hence the name. Glass eels gradually grow more pigmented as they move closer to shore. Once they become fully pigmented and move into estuaries and the mouths of rivers, they are known as elvers. Historically, elvers were the first stage that most people were aware of and they seemed to appear from nowhere. American eels remain as elvers for up to a year before they grow into yellow eels, named for their yellowish color that darkens to brown or grey as they age. This is the adult stage, but they are still sexually immature. In fact, up until this stage, they have not even differentiated into males and females. That happens during the yellow eel stage and seems to be influenced by populations. The denser the eel population is in the area, the larger the percentage that develops into males. The reason dissections of eels failed to find sexual organs or eggs is because they were dissecting yellow eels that hadn't fully differentiated yet. American eels can remain in the yellow stage for 10 to 25 years as they gradually mature. Once the eel's life starts to come to an end, it will metamorphose into a final stage called a silver eel. Silver eels undergo physiological changes to prepare themselves for their journey back to the Sargasso Sea. Their pectoral fins get bigger, their digestive tract degrades, the eyes shift to being adapted to a marine environment, the skin thickens to prepare for colder ocean waters, and fat builds up. Silver eels don't eat as they journey to the Sargasso Sea, surviving on fat stores that will last them a journey of up to 4,500 kilometers back to where they were born. Interestingly, the farther an eel travels from the Sargasso sea during its life, the larger it will grow and longer it will live before returning to mate.
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(Image: a leptocephalus larva. It is a small, flattened, transparent animal with a tiny head and large eye. The body is overall the shape of a long, slender leaf. End ID)
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(Image: a group of American glass eels resting on a yellow surface. They have the same shape as the adults, but are tiny and transparent, with only the eyes, parts of the skull, and spine being a darker color. End ID)
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(image: an American eel elver being held in somebody's hand. It is small enough to fit in the palm and is a light greenish-brow color. It has the same body structure as an adult. End ID)
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(Image: a yellow eel that has only recently reached this stage, as evidenced by its yellow-green color. It is being held in somebody's hand. End ID)
American eels are classified as endangered by the IUCN, who also described them as being at a very high risk for extinction in the wild. The population underwent a major crash in the 1980s, though it had been declining for a while already. The biggest cause of this decline appears to be dams. Young eels can often cross dams to get upstream thanks to their ability to climb, but adult eels trying to get back out to sea to breed are often blocked. Even if they get past dams, they are highly sensitive to low-dissolved oxygen environments, which waters just below dams tend to be. An eel could make it over the dam just to suffocate at the base. Since yellow eels are more likely to become female in low population density areas, the drop in population is resulting in an abundance of females with not enough males to fertilize all of their eggs. Pollution is also a problem as certain pollutants can accumulate in the eel's fat, then poison it during lean times. Overfishing is another problem, likely just as big if not bigger than damming. American eels have been eaten since ancient times and eel meat is considered a delicacy in many cultures. Because of how complex their life cycle is, American eels can't effectively be bred in captivity and so virtually all eel meat on the market is from wild captures. Eel meat labeled as farm raised is usually actually captured from the wild to be raised in captivity and is therefore not sustainable. Despite multiple attempts to give them legal protection, American eels have little protection in the US or Canada. Eels provide an important service to their ecosystems, being a major predator and food source. They also act as the hosts to larvae of certain mussel species. Freshwater mussels are one of the most endangered animal groups and the lack of their hosts isn't helping with that.
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(Image: a mature American yellow eel or silver eel being held up to the camera by a person in a blue sweatshirt. The eel is longer than their arms and a grey color with white underbelly. End ID)
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cicadadust · 6 months ago
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Super late to this trend, but I doodled my Gojis' eyes for fun
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thelordofologies · 25 days ago
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Sargasso Emerald - Drepanogynis bifasciata
@hispaatra, @zick-the-fairy, @the-ellia-west, @thegalacticidiot, this is a really short one, because, like often is the case, not a lot is known about this moth.
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Description
The forewing of the Sargasso emerald is 13 to 16 millimetres long, green in colour, marked with two wide, meandering white lines and a white ring between, the margins are like white flashes, and sometimes with brown between these. The hindwings are basally white with a central brown cell spot, and have a wide light brown margin often chequered brown and white. The thorax is green, while the abdomen is brown.
Distribution
Drepanogynis bifasciata is a species of moth found in South Africa, Lesotho, and Zimbabwe.
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Image sources:
1.
https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/290774108
2.
https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/282713187
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Text references:
1.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drepanogynis_bifasciata
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unbfacts · 8 months ago
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jester-of-rags-and-yarn · 18 days ago
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And like you I’m a genius before my time! Disbelieving, That’s the real crime!
Lyrics from Touch Tone Telephone - Lemon Demon
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numercnnightingale · 5 months ago
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thinking more about this as an AU
what if; the second ruler of barian world. The apple of eden became a poisoned one.
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contremineur · 3 days ago
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The scent that came from the dress was very faint at first, then it grew stronger. The smell of vetivert and frangipani, of cinnamon and dust and lime tree when they are flowering. The smell of the sun and smell of the rain.
Jean Rhys, from Wide Sargasso Sea (André Deutsch 1966)
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cassmouse · 6 months ago
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So I've been developing a very very clear type in media recently
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haveyoureadthisbook-poll · 6 months ago
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saintmelangell · 11 months ago
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sometimes i’ll go out and take a book with me, not reading it but i just want its presence near me
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