Conversation Between acherontia and Acutipuerilis
Showing Visitor Messages 1 to 3 of 3
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Thanks for the explanation, Joe! Nice to know my latin roots are still vaguely (very vaguely) there!
Did I read that you actually named the sponge? The only traces I can find of it are on a website 'Old as the Hills' and a PDF that is partly in Oriental characters. I should be processing images but curiosoity got the better of me ;) I must 'waste' quite a lot of time trying to learn and find out about various things that are new to me!!
I suppose that there are quite a few organisms still being catologued and, unfortunately, quite a few that may never be - especially in rain forests.
Acher
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You're the first person who's asked, and you've actually done pretty well! :-)
It's interpretable in a number of ways, but it was originally meant along the lines of "spiky teenager" - it's a fossil sponge I named because the juveniles were incredibly prickly! (Full name Acutipuerilis spinosus.) It's a delightful species, honestly. The spines are as long as the body in one specimen...
Cheers,
Joe
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I've been trying, without success to translate your latin name. I've got about as far as 'sharp youth' or 'clever boy' from acutis and puer but being a dumbo at latin grammar I'm not sure - go on... tell all!!
Acherontia atropis