Spider lungs!

This is very cool: it's a series of scanning electron micrographs of spider book lungs. I'd like to hang a few of those on my wall.

Tags

More like this

This is beautiful, I'd hang it on my wall. It's a genetic map of the first synthetic organism, and it and many others will be on display in the Serpentine Gallery in London this weekend. And gosh, what do you know, I am going to be in London this weekend! I may have to sneak out of The Amazing…
A few days ago I posted a photo of a Prenolepis ant queen. It's a decent photo, in focus and properly exposed. But probably not anything I'd print out and hang on the wall. Check out the monochrome version above, though (click on it to enlarge). I don't often put my images through such severe…
Last night's talk on the Cambrian explosion went really well - managed to nicely weave a narrative of fossils, genetic analysis, and evo-devo over the two hours (questions were spread throughout the talk). Over at Pharyngula, PZ has linked to some nice scanning electron micrographs of Cambrian…
Oh, but I do rankle Mark Armitage. He has taken to cc'ing me his email to others, all in this bluff, indignant, "me am too a scientist" pose, and it is hilarious. This is probably the last one I'll post here, but I do hope he keeps sending me this stuff — it provides a moment of levity. Hello…

Beautiful...

By Doc_Murray (not verified) on 14 Dec 2009 #permalink

beautiful! thank you.

I had a friend from S. Africa who told me about a time she and some friends were staying in a lodge in Kenya. they turned off the lights to go to sleep and it was darker than dark and very quiet, they were miles from anywhere, but... they heard breathing. coming from somewhere in their room. they turned on the lights, looked around--nothing, no animal crouched under the bed or anything.

turned the lights back off--breathing. soft, but definitely something was breathing, and it was in their room. they turned the lights back on, searched some more, and finally saw the very large spider perched on a rafter. apparently those book lungs can move some air.

By kalibhakta (not verified) on 14 Dec 2009 #permalink

It's hard to get perspective at those magnifications. What were those mushroom-shaped projections on the surfaces?

By Brownian, OM (not verified) on 14 Dec 2009 #permalink

Those are lovely. The textures are amazing.

I started singing the Spider-Man theme song to myself, but replacing 'Spider-Man' with 'Spider-Lungs'. Didn't get past the first line, though.

I think I may be a nerd.

Spider Lungs!
Spider lungs!

They're much tinier
than Kim Il Sung's!

Shaped like books
on a shelf

Not enough air
to save an Elf

Look out!
You stepped on Spider Lungs!

I should never have tried that, where's Cuttlefish?

By Pareidolius (not verified) on 14 Dec 2009 #permalink

Amazing! There are more cool shots in his paper:

http://www.springerlink.com/content/k70411w88334h2uh/fulltext.html

Pretty awesome work from what looks like a 14-year-old kid.

"Resolving a longstanding conflict, Kamenz's studies confirmed three years ago that book lungs evolved from gills only a single time in the ancestors of arachnids." Heavy duty! So technical that I can't follow it, but it sure is cool.

What's not so widely known is that spiders share their collections of book lungs; taking a breath and then returning them to the collection so that others can enjoy them. They keep these collections in FLYbraries.

Spider lungs. probably the missing ingredient for my super-villain potion.