Are There None Among You Brave Enough?

To take our knitting challenge? Or are you waiting for us to raise the stakes a little? To refresh your memory, I challenged knitting readers to create a Bone-Devouring Zombie Worm with Dwarf Male in a previous post. Since the males are internal it would be cool to have a flap where you can open it to see the dwarf male giving up the spermie. Below is a figure from the article with the female (‘D’) with eggs traveling up the oviduct (white blotches). In ‘E’ the arrows point to 2 dwarf males, the ‘fronds’ (aka palps, labeled p) are topmost part of the organism.

osedaxxx.png

To add to the pot, Craig said he would like a knitted Giant Isopod. Here is a post for your creative spark.

Did I mention we are offering $20 (read TWENTY US DOLLARS) for each specimen?? We’ll even pay the shipping! All we ask is that post concise designs on freely on the web. We can post it here, or you can post it at your own blog should you have one.

So get knitting!

20 Replies to “Are There None Among You Brave Enough?”

  1. Once I’m out of finals hell, I can give it a shot! ( might not be knit though, but will be plushy.)

  2. If anyone needs more pictures of Osedax or Bathynomus, flip through our site (search toolbar on left) or email one of us for papers.

  3. I think I can create an Osedax using crochet, rather than knitting-it’s easier for me to shape things in crochet stitches. I’ll try to keep track of a pattern, but usually I crochet creatures in a free-form manner. It will undoubtedly be hideous…I’ve got some maroon yarn for the tube, and some sage green yarn for the “root”, and some multicolored yarn for the “fronds” (whatever they’re called).

    Where exactly do the males go? If I crochet a tube with an opening at the base, can I just stuff the males inside? They look rather flat and nondescript from one of the photos.

  4. I modified the post so you can get a better idea of the worm and dwarf males.

  5. Thanks-I have a better idea now. I also downloaded the 2006 Goffredi paper at work today. I started on the tube this evening (in pink yarn)…that will be the easy part. If I manage to pull this off, I’ll send the hideous thing to you (I’m more of a Cnidaria gal myself), and you can keep the $20 for your Donors Choose project. :-)

    The pattern should be comprehensible to anyone familiar with basic crochet techniques.

  6. Yes, I know Barn Owl, I read your blog! I love the jelly you did recently. You can do a venus fly trap anemone for me too, if you want. I have a paper out in review describing 4 new species of anemones.

  7. maybe i should include a picture of it as a figure? slip it in with the revisions and see if the editors notice

  8. The Osedax yarniflorax is coming along nicely (at least the tube and the palps).

    When you have a preprint of your paper on the anemones, Kevin, post an image of the venus flytrap species, and I’ll see what I can do.

  9. “Your species, immortalized in yarn.”

    Talk about a niche market!
    You may be on to something, Barn owl. I love it. lol.

  10. Oh that was a separate thing, I’m not describing a venus flytrap anemone. But the ones I did do are very pretty too!

    I’m so excited about the Osedax!!

  11. Yarn Osedax update:

    Trunk and crown are complete, and I’m finishing the “roots” on the ovisac tonight, and I expect to have the whole thing finished by Monday. Where do I mail it?

    I’ll post a photo on my blog, but won’t reveal the surprise. I’ll leave that for the Deep-Sea News crew.

  12. It’s finished!

    I posted a photo on my blog this morning…not revealing the surprise, of course. I’ll fire off an e-mail to you later today.

    I used leftover yarn from other projects, so it’s rather hideous. I would crochet another marine polychaete in the future though-it was fun!

  13. Another fun challenge would be the eversible pharynx of a predatory polychaete!

  14. Finally made it to the post office today, so you should receive the Osedax in a few days.

    I put it in a small box-I forgot to mention that I incorporated two silkworm cocoons within the ovisac, to serve as ovaries, and I didn’t want them to get crushed.

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