Perhaps you can understand why this tiny sea slug is sometimes called the ‘sea sheep’ or ‘leaf sheep’? It grazes on algae just as a sheep grazes on grass, and it bears more than a little resemblance to an actual sheep. Sea sheep don’t digest the chloroplasts in the algae they eat—instead, they absorb the energy-producing cells. As a result, the leaf-like fins all over the sea sheep’s back are loaded with working chloroplasts, making the sea sheep one of the only non-plant life forms on Earth with the ability to photosynthesize—that is, produce its own energy using sunlight and water. Who knew an evolutionary advancement could be so cute?
Adorably evolutionary sea sheep
Today in History
More Desktop Wallpapers:
-
Horseshoe Bend, Arizona
-
Ayutthaya Historical Park, Thailand
-
Jan van Eyckplein in Bruges, Belgium
-
Land ho in New Zealand 250 years ago
-
Albuquerque International Balloon Fiesta
-
Rock formations at Sedona, Arizona
-
Sea Otter Awareness Week
-
Bear watching in the Finnish forest
-
Registan Square, Samarkand, Uzbekistan
-
A universe underground
-
Thomsons gazelles, Maasai Mara, Kenya
-
Siblings that play together…
-
Celebrating Native American Heritage Month
-
Camels in the desert, United Arab Emirates
-
Union Square, Manhattan
-
Moody skies over Valletta
-
Birds of the Drömling
-
Masai giraffes in Amboseli National Park, Kenya
-
Autumn in Central Park, New York
-
Here we mark the price of freedom
-
Happy Halloween!
-
Solar Impulse 2 in Honolulu
-
It’s NASA’s 60th birthday
-
Misool, Raja Ampat Islands, Indonesia
-
Twas a night just like tonight
-
Red fox in the Netherlands
-
Go climb a tree
-
A visionary artist paints his own garden view
-
Glenfinnan Viaduct
-
World Octopus Day
Bing Wallpaper Gallery

