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Dinosaur Shrimp Emerges After Arizona Monsoon
Live Science
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2/19/2025
Hundreds of three-eyed ancient creatures called triops emerges after heavy rainfall in Arizona. Their eggs can stay dormant for decades, waiting for water.
Category
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Tech
Transcript
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00:00
It's no surprise that northern Arizona is a very dry place. It's a desert. But sometimes they get
00:06
a lot of rain. And that is exactly what happened the last week and a half of July of this year.
00:12
The region got almost five inches of rain, which is nearly 13 centimeters. And when it rains so
00:19
much in the desert, these temporary ponds known as vernal pools form. And at Wipaki National Monument,
00:27
some visitors notice these like tadpole-like creatures swimming in one of the pools.
00:34
So they quickly alerted the rangers and they said, hey, I saw the tadpoles in the pond at
00:38
the ball courts. There it is. Look at that. It looks like a little alien. Turns out it's
00:44
a crustacean. Oh, yeah. Oh, here's the ball court. What is the ball court for? Do you know?
00:51
Right. So the indigenous people of the region built this ceremonial ball court. And we're
00:57
actually not sure what it was, what its purpose was. I did ask the ranger if it, you know, was
01:03
used for something similar, like the Maya ball game. But she says they're just not sure. It's
01:08
actually not in the same shape as the Maya ball game court. So perhaps it's entirely different.
01:14
But great breeding ground to just hold a lot of these little creatures. Yeah.
01:19
Right. It's perfect for the vernal pool that formed. So to learn what this visitor was
01:25
talking about, one of the rangers, I spoke with her. Her name is Lauren Carter, a lead
01:30
interpretation ranger at Wupatki National Monument. She went down and scooped one up. You're looking
01:35
at her hand right there. She says these creatures are known as triops and they look like little mini
01:42
horseshoe crabs with three eyes. And yeah, look at those eyes there. So it has two compound eyes
01:48
which are common among arthropods, which is this massive group that includes insects, arachnids,
01:54
scorpions, crustaceans. I mentioned this particular creature is a crustacean. And
02:00
then it has a third eye. Look at that little dot between its two main eyes.
02:04
Oh, it's so zen. I know. It looks very wise. So that third eye actually senses light.
02:13
And the third eye is actually quite common among arthropods. And it turns out, like, for example,
02:19
bees, they have their two compound eyes and they have three simple eyes. So this one is very
02:26
prominent. You can see it right in the middle. But yeah, it's got three eyes and that's how it
02:32
got its name. Triops means three eyes in Greek. Cool. So how long can they stay dormant?
02:40
That's kind of their survival trick. It's so dry in the desert. They can stay in their eggs
02:46
for decades. And then once there's a heavy rainfall and these vernal pools form, they pop
02:52
to life. They hatch. And within hours, they start gobbling up as much food as possible.
02:58
So they can filter feed. They can nibble on, you know, seeds and leaves and roots.
03:07
If it's like a scarce food situation, they can even cannibalize each other.
03:12
Oh, no.
03:13
So I feel bad for the smaller ones. They're probably more the prey for the larger triops.
03:18
Is that probably what happened to his poor little missing left arm there? Because I'm
03:21
looking at these other ones, you know, from stock images, and they seem a little bit more even.
03:27
I did notice that. Yeah, I'm not sure how he broke his little appendage. Poor, poor dude.
03:33
At least it doesn't appear he was entirely eaten or whatever happened to him.
03:40
Yeah, tell me more about these little creatures. They're kind of cool looking.
03:43
I know. So after they've eaten a lot, they molt a few times, you know,
03:47
they're crustaceans, just like crabs and lobsters. And then they reach adulthood really fast,
03:52
just over a week, I think eight or nine days, they reach adulthood.
03:56
And they're ready to mate again, start the next generation.
04:01
Yeah, you can tell by looking at this photo, but they're not that big.
04:05
They're about 1.5 inches long, which is, you know, about four centimeters.
04:11
And they have a few nicknames. So you know, they're called triops, that's their genus name.
04:17
But sometimes they're called tadpole shrimp. They're also known as dinosaur shrimp,
04:23
because they have this long evolutionary history. Their ancestors date back to the
04:28
Zenovian period, which lasted from 419 million to 359 million years ago. And they look pretty
04:36
much the same as their ancestors did. It's really impressive.
04:40
Yeah, I mean, but because they're so old, like, can we call them living fossils?
04:46
Oh my gosh, I'm really glad you asked that. Because this is,
04:49
I think this is a term that gets thrown around. But it turns out that a lot of scientists really
04:54
hate it. And Carter, the ranger I spoke with, she told me, I don't like the term living fossil,
05:02
because it causes a misunderstanding with the public that they haven't changed at all.
05:08
But they have changed, they have evolved. It's just that the outward appearance of them is very
05:12
similar to what they were millions of years ago. So put another way, they do look the same,
05:19
but they are not the same. They have evolved, their internal processes are different.
05:26
At least some of them. So yeah.
05:30
And, and, and this is all just because of that insane reign that they had.
05:35
Yeah, yeah, they were, I guess the pond lasted three to four weeks, is what Carter told me.
05:42
So you know, I said they reach adulthood quite rapidly. And then it's time to mate. So how do
05:47
they mate? You know, a male and a female might find each other and the female will lay eggs.
05:53
But their circumstances are so, it's so interesting, like maybe they won't be able to find
06:00
a partner of the opposite sex. And it turns out that triops are hermaphrodites as well,
06:06
which means they have both male and female organs. So yeah, so they, they have that flexibility.
06:14
And they're also parthenogenic, which means the females can produce, produce offspring from
06:19
unfertilized eggs, so they don't need a male to spawn the next generation.
06:26
More power to them. That's, I guess, and that's why they've been around for so long. That's,
06:30
that's pretty cool.
06:31
Yeah, it's a pretty cool superpower.
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