Thursday, June 11, 2009

Mantis Shrimp / Shako (蝦蛄) / Lai Liu Ha (攋尿蝦)

Since I don't have a quarantine tank, I drop my Live Rock directly into my tank, after drip acclimation. The LFS in Tokyo I go to told me that that was fine. So far it hasn't been too much of an issue, in terms of zero deaths-caused-by-LR-nitrate-stank-pollution. However, I have had a couple of interesting hitchhikers.

This one here is a Mantis Shrimp, about an inch long. I didn't know what these were til I did some research... weeks after I bought my LR, I noticed some googly things moving in the dark. The reason why it was so compelling was probably because of this:

  • "Mantis shrimp possess hyperspectral colour vision, allowing up to 12 colour channels extending in the ultraviolet[10]. Their eyes (both mounted on mobile stalks and constantly moving about independently of each other) are similarly variably coloured, and are considered to be the most complex eyes in the animal kingdom.[11][12]"
    (Source: see below) The independent eye movement was definitely interesting, and weird.
I couldn't get a pic, but this sucker was peeping out of his hideout in the LR. After id'g it on this out online, at TalkingReef, I quickly found that this species is a deadly one, which kills other things in your tank. What sealed the deal for me was this video, of a pet Mantis Shrimp (a huge one), killing a crab.

Nicknames: Thumb Splitters, Sea Locusts, Prawn Killers



Also interesting, is that Japanese eat this as Sashimi (Shako 蝦蛄), and the Cantonese eat this stir fried (affectionately called, Lai-Liu-Ha, "pissing shrimp" (攋尿蝦) due to the fact that they spray water when taken out of the tanks live). I remember the stir fry, these suckers have sharp shells, and can easily cut your fingers.



(Right: This is what I call "Mantis-Style")


(Left: Mantis-Style 2. Right: Playing Dead - these critters are smart. I think it was doing that so it could bolt if I gave it a chance).

How to catch a Mantis Shrimp:
I grabbed the Live Rock it was in, put it in the sink, and used a hypodermic-type thing I bought in the 100 Yen shop (in the makeup section) to spray room-temperature water at the hole. It slithered out, like a millipede, into another hole. Sprayed again, and it fell onto the sink. That was it.

The fish store agreed to take it back (no credit of course :)). They were like, "Shakko...!"

Source: Wikipedia

Chitons


Check out these Chitons. I didn't know what these were either, until I posted the photos to an aquarium message board. These critters are supposedly harmless, and graze on algae. However, they have multiplied quickly, so I may need to do a bit of "cleansing". I'm also paranoid that they will one day crawl out of the tank, crawl into my ear and latch onto my brain stem. You can understand my fear when you see these prehistoric badboys upfront. Check out this research publication with different species of Chitons. Definitely gives me the heebie jeebies... *Brrrrrr*

If you've had any experience with Chitons, let me know...





Thursday, June 04, 2009

In honor of Tiananmen, June 4th, 1989

In honor of the fallen, the jailed, and the forever-traumatized at the oppression by its own government, I'm posting just 2 photos of a DVD documentary on Chinese History I watched ("China, A Century of Revolution. The Definitive Six-Hour History of China”).
I wonder if this innocuous posting will be one of the 100's of 1000's which Beijing is currently blocking from its citizens?
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Sunday, May 31, 2009

Tokyo Ramen Show 2009


We decided to check out the Tokyo Ramen Show 2009...West of Shibuya on the Hanzomon Line, about 4 stops. First, you wait in line for about 25 minutes to buy your tickets (pic with the guy in the purple shirt) from machines, like the ones outside Ramen shops. Each ticket is 750 and gets you a bowl of ramen. You can buy multiple.

Next, you have to wait in line again for each different vendor, so you need to wait another 20-few hours, depending on the popularity of the vendor.

I chose R-14, which had Tonkatsu ramen, and a moderate line.

  • Soup base was tasty. It was probably pork fat, judging from the foaming layer of grease on top, and the amount of burnage my face experienced when collaterally caught by flying drops of it while slurping noodles
  • 2-3 slices of fatty pork was of good quality, good balance of pork and fat
  • Noodles had good bounce
  • The egg was the most disappointing ingredient. In fact, it was the most disappointing egg I've had in Japan to date. Mainly due to it being hard boiled - I've gotten used to eating soft boiled eggs here...
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Sunday, May 10, 2009

A "Cool" idea that just wasn't...

As I ran out of contact lens solution late one evening in Tokyo, I was forced to settle for what the local Konbini (Convenience store) had. They actually carried a well-regarded lens care brand, "Rohto". I'd used their eye drops for a few years while I was in Hong Kong.

However, the only type of lens solution they had was called "Soft one Cool". I knew it was probably different than regular solution, but had no choice. After soaking the lenses for the night, putting them in my eyes was anything but Cool. It BURNED!!! Maybe my eyes weren't used to this sensation, but I'm a bit too paranoid to leave them in my eyes for a few minutes to "see how it goes". Therefore, I just wore glasses the whole day and bought my normal Renu/ Optifree solution later.

Motanaiyi!!
Here it is for sale online.

Tuesday, March 03, 2009

Delicate wrapping in Japan

Although Japan prides itself on its almost burdensome recycling policy (involves separating your trash into about 10 categories), it spares no trees (or plastic) when it comes to wrapping. Check out my eggs and tomatos, which were delivered as part of my entire groceries (free over USD $50).
Dozen Eggs:
Bubble wrap on the outside:

Plastic bag inside of the bubble wrap:
Plastic container on the inside of the plastic bag (with a once-use plastic seal strip):
Tomatoes:

Styrofoam wrapping taped to outside:
Plastic wrap with styrofoam tray inside of styrofoam wrapping:
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Sunday, March 01, 2009

Bicolor angel victimizes 2 clownfish

Bought 2 clownfish (percula, small size), and a Bicolor angel, at the same time. I was at first worried that the blue damsels would attack the small clowns, but instead noticed the Bicolor was nipping them at times.

I thought this would pass, but it didn't... few days later, the clowns' tails were bitten off, and they died soon after.

I've never had this problem before with a Bicolor, and there's not issues with the damsels and it... now I don't know what fish it can get along with...