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Bob Pastorio
 
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Default Japanese hot dogs

http://www.nipponham.co.jp/winny/kazari/index.html

But, seriously...

Pastorio

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J.J. [aka j*ni]
 
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Default Japanese hot dogs

Hark! I heard Bob Pastorio > say:

> http://www.nipponham.co.jp/winny/kazari/index.html
>
> But, seriously...


Heh, last summer, Mike told us about the "Octodog":

http://www.octodog.net/

Now we have a "Squiddog" (top right photo).

What a world... ;-)


--
J.J. ~ mom, gamer, novice cook ~
...fish heads, fish heads, eat them up, yum!
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levelwave
 
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Default Japanese hot dogs

Bob Pastorio wrote:

> http://www.nipponham.co.jp/winny/kazari/index.html
>
> But, seriously...



Something is just inherently wrong with this...

~john!


--
What was it like to see - the face of your own stability - suddenly look
away...

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Gregory Morrow
 
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Default Japanese hot dogs


"J.J. [aka j*ni]" wrote:

> Hark! I heard Bob Pastorio > say:
>
> > http://www.nipponham.co.jp/winny/kazari/index.html
> >
> > But, seriously...

>
> Heh, last summer, Mike told us about the "Octodog":
>
> http://www.octodog.net/
>
> Now we have a "Squiddog" (top right photo).
>
> What a world... ;-)



And in a "Sheldon - ish" vein:

http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/l...,7510129.story

Octopus can't hide his desire

Field researcher 1st to document invertebrate erection

By John Biemer
Tribune staff reporter

November 12, 2003

As the Field Museum's Dr. Janet Voight watched a male octopus get rebuffed
in his attempt to mate with a female, she noticed something striking: One of
the sea creature's eight arms was longer than usual.

This was noteworthy because the two-spot octopus uses the tip of one
tentacle to pass spermatophores, or tubular packets filled with millions of
sperm, to females during mating. Later study concluded that the arm was
engorged because it contains erectile tissue--the first documentation,
scientists say, of an invertebrate erection.

The discovery seems to demonstrate an evolutionary quirk that unites man and
mollusk, said co-researcher Dr. Joseph Thompson, a biology professor at St.
Joseph's University in Philadelphia.

"Here's an example of two very different organisms, mammals and octopuses,
that do not share a recent common ancestry, but both have settled on a
similar solution to a common problem," said Thompson, who specializes in
morphology and physiology.

Though research on the subject is still in its beginning stages,
understanding how that erectile tissue works on an animal so different from
mammals has an outside chance of helping to reveal a potent chemical for
control of blood pressure, or a new Viagra, Voight said. The study appears
in a recent issue of the Journal of Zoology .

However, unlike in mammals, the two-spot's tissue is not continuous with the
reproductive tract, because for octopuses it's located at the end of its
modified tentacle. Still, the tissue in the ligula, the organ at the tip of
the octopus' mating arm, has similarities with that on a mammalian penis.

Erectile tissue is defined by its ability to inflate. Penises and the
two-spot octopus' ligula both have abundant blood vessels, large internal
cavities divided by networks of collagen fibers that provide the support to
constrain the distended organ so that it elongates rather than simply
growing larger.

However, humans and octopuses have different means of controlling blood flow
to the tissues, said Voight, an octopus specialist, and the octopuses may
have a distinct blood pressure control chemical.

"Because octopuses are so very distantly related to humans and this
character has arisen separately, there could be a radically different
mechanism controlling it," she wrote in an e-mail Tuesday from a research
vessel from the Pacific Rim, off the coast of Mexico.

"It might be a long shot," Voight concedes, but studying such mechanisms
could potentially lead to a new medicine to combat erectile dysfunction in
humans.

Dr. Greg Bales, a urologist at the University of Chicago Hospital, called
the phenomenon "intriguing" and worthy of further exploration. "Perhaps
there could be a translation into a human model," he said. "How plausible
that is, I think it's difficult to say."

The erectile tissue is not common to all octopuses, Thompson said, but
appears to have been developed as a survival trait among some species. The
ligula is bright white and does not have the color-changing cells that allow
two-spots to blend in with any background. Because the species hunts during
the day, the white ligula could attract predators, so the ability to
contract it may reduce the risk.

Scientists say octopus mating habits are difficult to observe, so many
aspects are still clouded in mystery. In some cases, females will prey on
males. In the case of the frisky male in the Texas tank, the "female was
literally fighting him off and in the end, he bit and envenomed her," Voight
wrote. "I won't go into the details, but I separated the two at that point."


Copyright © 2003, Chicago Tribune

</>
>
>
> --
> J.J. ~ mom, gamer, novice cook ~
> ..fish heads, fish heads, eat them up, yum!



  #5 (permalink)   Report Post  
 
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Bob Pastorio wrote:
>
> http://www.nipponham.co.jp/winny/kazari/index.html
>
> But, seriously...
>
> Pastorio


Aggghhh... the Iron Chefs strike again!


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