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Burrowing Into The Bobbit Worm s Behavior

Burrowing Into The Bobbit Worm’s Behavior Using trace fossils, scientists have reconstructed the 20-million-year-old lair of giant marine worms in northeast Taiwan, providing insights into the predator’s behavior. SHARE Scientific Reports. In 1993, a Mrs. Lorena Bobbit rose to infamy for castrating her abusive husband with a kitchen knife. While the case is now largely forgotten, Mrs. Bobbit’s memory lives on in the form of the giant Bobbit worm, which can grow up to three meters long. A fearsome predator typically found burrowed in the seafloor, the Bobbit worm ambushes unsuspecting prey with its powerful, scissor-like jaws. The still-living prey is then dragged down into the burrow for the Bobbit worm to begin its feast.

Researchers Say They ve Found the Ancient Dens of Giant Carnivorous Worms

Researchers Say They ve Found the Ancient Dens of Giant Carnivorous Worms Illustration: Sassa Chen Twenty million years ago, the shores of northern Taiwan were sandstone sediments at the bottom of the sea, where 6-foot-long worms lurked in their burrows, waiting for unsuspecting prey to pass overhead. Now, a team of geoscientists have chronicled 319 trace fossils of those carnivorous marine worms, whose dens fossilized in the Miocene muck. Advertisement “In the beginning, we were firmly convinced it was a very fancy shrimp burrow,” Ludvig Löwemark, a sedimentologist at National Taiwan University, said in a video call. “And then, after talking to some other experts, we were leaning towards this bivalve hypothesis. But in the end, we became more and more convinced that it’s actually a bobbit worm that made this trace.”

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