[-] retractedfangs@mander.xyz 2 points 9 hours ago

Ironic, considering the name

[-] retractedfangs@mander.xyz 3 points 9 hours ago

In my experience, the best way to ask about unpopular (here, on Lemmy) stuff is to make a post in a generic community. Discoverability sucks here and not many people are on here too so niche communities are often deserted.

So, if you make a post on popular lemmies like this one, you have better chances to receive a helpful response. I'm not sure how the situation with writing communities is, maybe they are active enough to be of use for you!

[-] retractedfangs@mander.xyz 5 points 9 hours ago

Yep, it's accessible through the UI when you're viewing a community's feed, to the right of the sort type chooser.

18
Fashion Souls (mander.xyz)

cross-posted from: https://mander.xyz/post/53470043

Agdayne sure knows how to dress in his Crypt!

Set to the left: hunter's hat + wanderer coat + black leather gloves and boots + claymore + light crossbow

Set to the right: thief mask + Agdayne's black robe and kilt + black leather boots + uchigatana + Avelyn

19
Fashion Souls (mander.xyz)

Agdayne sure knows how to dress in his Crypt!

Set to the left: hunter's hat + wanderer coat + black leather gloves and boots + claymore + light crossbow

Set to the right: thief mask + Agdayne's black robe and kilt + black leather boots + uchigatana + Avelyn

[-] retractedfangs@mander.xyz 2 points 2 weeks ago

From the photo alone, the octopus appeared to belong to the genus Thaumelodone, a variety of small, squat octopus found in the deep waters of the southern hemisphere.

At first, there was evidence that the animal was indeed part of the Thaumelodone genus. It had a zigzag pattern of suckers on its arms, which is a distinctly Thaumelodone feature. It also had no ink sac—consistent with a Thaumelodone, since in the darkness of the deep ocean, predators can’t see their prey anyway, so a defensive cloud of ink serves no protective function.

But there were multiple differences too. First there was the funnel organ. Octopuses can move at high speed by sucking water into an interior funnel and squirting it out like air escaping from a balloon. Inside the funnel of a Thaumelodone octopus is a small saliva gland, but in this case the gland was comparatively huge, wrapping its way around the entire interior of the funnel.

Then there was the texture. Thaumelodone octopuses are covered with small bumps, or papillae, but the little blue octopus was smooth. There was, too, the matter of the animal’s teeth—or tooth. Thaumelodone typically have seven teeth, but the specimen had just one large one. Finally came the color. The typical Thaumelodone is a shade of maroon. This one—while appearing blue under the light of an underwater camera—was actually white or even clear on top and purple on the bottom.

The verdict: the “blue” octopus did not fit at all in the Thaumelodone group, but rather in the Microeledone, a related deep-water genus—and it was reclassified accordingly.

[-] retractedfangs@mander.xyz 2 points 3 weeks ago* (last edited 3 weeks ago)

Reminds me of the emojis I made when I was learning LibreSprite.

Yours are much better though!

retractedfangs

joined 4 weeks ago