The blind Yeti Crab "Kiwa tyleri" has been revealed this week in a paper describing it for the first time ever. This lovely white-colored creature lives in the Antarctic while its relatives live in ...
The hairy-chested Yeti crab, which survives in an environment of no light, little oxygen, extreme temperatures and tremendous pressure, may not be able to survive a warming ocean, scientists say. The ...
Yeti crabs don't comb their hair to look good — they do it because they're hungry. These bizarre deep-sea animals grow their food in their own hair, trapping bacteria and letting it flourish there ...
The Hoff may be known for patrolling Los Angeles beaches, and now his namesake, a new type of hairy-chested "Hoff" crab is among six new species that have been discovered living in the bizarre ...
Researchers have shed light on the private life of a new species of deep-sea crab, previously nicknamed the 'Hoff' crab because of its hairy chest. Researchers at the University of Southampton have ...
David Hasselhoff's legendary chest hair has earned him a place of fame among marine life.According to the BBC, British scientists have named a newly-discovered species of crab after the "Baywatch" ...
Yeti crabs don't comb their hair to look good — they do it because they're hungry. These bizarre deep-sea animals grow their food in their own hair, trapping bacteria and letting it flourish there ...
Why is Christian Science in our name? Our name is about honesty. The Monitor is owned by The First Church of Christ, Scientist, and we’ve always been transparent about that. The church publishes the ...
Remember the Hoff Crab? You bet your bippy you do. You can thank Nicolai Roterman for that. Nicolai, a hydrothermal vent biologist and a member of the expedition that found this hairy crab, coined the ...
A hairy crab that was dubbed "The Hoff" when it was first found in Antarctic waters has now been given a formal scientific description and name. The creature, which lives in vast communities around ...
Yeti crabs don't comb their hair to look good they do it because they're hungry. These bizarre deep-sea animals grow their food in their own hair, trapping bacteria and letting it flourish there ...
‘Hoff’ yeti crabs around vents on the East Scotia Ridge in the Southern Ocean. Yeti crabs don't comb their hair to look good — they do it because they're hungry. These bizarre deep-sea animals grow ...