By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
Tech Consumer JournalTech Consumer JournalTech Consumer Journal
  • News
  • Phones
  • Tablets
  • Wearable
  • Home Tech
  • Streaming
Reading: New Deep-Sea Mollusk Has an Iron Tongue and Hitchhiking Worms That Eat Its Poo
Share
Sign In
Notification Show More
Font ResizerAa
Tech Consumer JournalTech Consumer Journal
Font ResizerAa
  • News
  • Phones
  • Tablets
  • Wearable
  • Home Tech
  • Streaming
Search
  • News
  • Phones
  • Tablets
  • Wearable
  • Home Tech
  • Streaming
Have an existing account? Sign In
Follow US
  • Contact
  • Blog
  • Complaint
  • Advertise
© 2022 Foxiz News Network. Ruby Design Company. All Rights Reserved.
Tech Consumer Journal > News > New Deep-Sea Mollusk Has an Iron Tongue and Hitchhiking Worms That Eat Its Poo
News

New Deep-Sea Mollusk Has an Iron Tongue and Hitchhiking Worms That Eat Its Poo

News Room
Last updated: February 10, 2026 1:47 pm
News Room
Share
SHARE

What’s armored, covered in worms, and has a rasping tongue? If you said the stuff of nightmares, you’re not wrong. Luckily, however, the critter in question is pretty small—and now famous.

Meet Ferreiraella populi, a very weird new species of deep-sea mollusk. It’s a kind of herbivorous mollusc called a chiton and sports an iron-covered radula (the aforementioned rasping tongue), eight armored shell plates, and poop-eating worms close to its tail. It received its first official scientific description on Friday, in a Biodiversity Data Journal study.

Social media-famous critter

A chiton’s “overall body plan is quite good at attaching to things. And for a lot of chitons, that means rocks,” Ze Frank, a science YouTuber, explained in a video. “Those plates give them some protection, but because they’re separate, they’re bendy-bendy. So, they can kind of mold themselves to uneven surfaces while they use their radula to scrape and eat algae.”

Researchers discovered it 18,045 feet (5,500 meters) below the surface of the water in Japan’s Izu-Ogasawara Trench in 2024. It joins a pre-established genus (Ferreiraella) of rare and snobbish mollusks—they live strictly on wood that has drifted down to the deep sea. In fact, their identification bolsters the idea that these environments are home to mysterious, very specialized groups of animals.

Frank participated in the naming of this odd little guy by asking viewers to send ideas for the specific epithet (the second part of the name) to go along with Ferreiraella (the genus), as well as explanations for the suggestion. He and a team of scientists received over 8,000 social media submissions in a single week. In a follow-up video, Frank highlighted a fantastic one that, in my humble opinion, should have been the first-place winner: Ferreiraella ellaellaeheheh. (If I have to explain that reference, go listen to some Rihanna and be ashamed of yourself).

Of the people

The first individual or team to publish a new species’ scientific description gets to choose its name while respecting certain rules. Frequently, specific epithets are inspired by places, people, physical characteristics, or mythology.

Julia Sigwart, a co-author of the study from the Senckenberg Research Institute & Museum, ultimately chose Ferreiraella populi, with “populi” meaning “of the people” in Latin. While that might sound boring for such a funky creature, 11 people separately submitted “populi.” Other contenders included Ferreiraella ohmu, in honor of an animal similar to a chiton in a Studio Ghibli film, and acknowledging the mollusk’s discovery in Japan.

“It can often take ten, if not twenty years, for a new species to be studied, scientifically described, named, and published,” Sigwart said in a Pensoft Publisher statement. In fact, a significant number of species go extinct before ever being discovered. Marine invertebrates particularly face this issue. “Ferreiraella populi has now been described and given a scientific name only two years after its discovery. This is crucial for the conservation of marine diversity, especially in light of the threats it faces such as deep-sea mining!”

The strange new critter sheds light on the strange life that lives in an extreme environment that we’re just beginning to understand.

Read the full article here

You Might Also Like

Scientists Say We Might Have 33 Senses. Here’s the Breakdown

‘Sinners’ Costumes, Props, and One Very Special Guitar Are Now Part of the Warner Bros. Studio Tour

The Last ‘Person’ You Want Handling Your Surgery Is a Hallucinating Robot

Who Sent Jeffrey Epstein a Gizmodo Article About Deleting Your Google History?

Discord Will Now Treat Everyone Like a Teen Unless They Prove They’re an Adult

Share This Article
Facebook Twitter Copy Link Print
Previous Article ‘Sinners’ Costumes, Props, and One Very Special Guitar Are Now Part of the Warner Bros. Studio Tour
Next Article Scientists Say We Might Have 33 Senses. Here’s the Breakdown
Leave a comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Stay Connected

248.1kLike
69.1kFollow
134kPin
54.3kFollow

Latest News

Please Don’t Hack Your Ray-Ban Smart Glasses to Buy Things for You
News
The ‘KPop Demon Hunters’ Writer-Directors Are Very Aware of the Sequel Pressure
News
Maybe It’s Time to Calm Down About OLED ‘Burn In’
News
Kimbal Musk Posts His Explanation for All Those Epstein Emails
News
Anthropic Safety Researcher’s Vague Resignation Isn’t Reassuring
News
Researchers Studied Work Habits in a Heavily AI-Pilled Workplace. They Sound Hellish
News
The Booziest Targaryen in ‘A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms’ Reveals His Surprising Inspiration
News
Dueling AIs Reconstruct Rules of Mysterious Roman-Era Board Game
News

You Might also Like

News

OpenAI Responds to Critical Super Bowl Commercials by Putting Ads in ChatGPT

News Room News Room 5 Min Read
News

Why Can’t NASA Shake Its Hydrogen Leak Curse?

News Room News Room 5 Min Read
News

Meta Faces Two Key Trials That Could Change Social Media Forever

News Room News Room 8 Min Read
Tech Consumer JournalTech Consumer Journal
Follow US
2024 © Prices.com LLC. All Rights Reserved.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • For Advertisers
  • Contact
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Username or Email Address
Password

Lost your password?