Dog--
The Freeman
- Joined
- Apr 16, 2005
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Wow, thats really something.
Imagine eating some pork and growing a pigtail.
Not quite the same my friend!
I hope that happens, ya fat ****in ****sI was reading the article, and what's even more interesting than being able to do photosynthesis, is that they can use the DNA/genes from the algae they have eaten. Imagine eating some pork and growing a pigtail.
This just in: Green slug is the most advanced creature in the universe.
Giant Enemy Crab
He's not your friend, buddy!
Should be named the Megaman Slug.
I wonder how accurate the article is as to what it's actually doing. Is it really stitching the plant's DNA with it's own or does it has a system where it can absorb the plantlife into its system but with the plant cells still fully seperate from the animal cells? (the same way there are loads of different non-human bacteria involved in the digestion process).
We should eat fire.
I wonder how accurate the article is as to what it's actually doing. Is it really stitching the plant's DNA with it's own or does it has a system where it can absorb the plantlife into its system but with the plant cells still fully seperate from the animal cells? (the same way there are loads of different non-human bacteria involved in the digestion process).
This is quite interesting. I hang around the docks a lot and I know most of the guys who worked there, so it surprised me when, just yesterday, I saw one of the dockers playing catch on Wharf 5. The reason it surprised me was because he's a veteran who lost the use of his hands in the first Gulf War. When I asked him he said he'd been bitten by one of these green sea slugs while unloading a crate a few days back. When he woke up the next morning he found there was feeling in his fingers for the first time in years, and over the next few days their use returned. I might ask him if he still has that sea slug. The possibilities could be tremendous.
This is quite interesting. I hang around the docks a lot and I know most of the guys who worked there, so it surprised me when, just yesterday, I saw one of the dockers playing catch on Wharf 5. The reason it surprised me was because he's a veteran who lost the use of his hands in the first Gulf War. When I asked him he said he'd been bitten by one of these green sea slugs while unloading a crate a few days back. When he woke up the next morning he found there was feeling in his fingers for the first time in years, and over the next few days their use returned. I might ask him if he still has that sea slug. The possibilities could be tremendous.