ink_in_hand (
ink_in_hand) wrote2009-01-30 04:56 pm
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No standard Mers here
Someone mentioned a while back that they were curious as to what a Gulper Eel (some species also known as the Pelican Eel) would look like as a merperson. Well...here you go whoever you are.
"What were you expecting? Ariel?"

"What were you expecting? Ariel?"

Whoa, I'm seriously out of it if I can't rationalize the details of some of my favorite organisms...
Re: Whoa, I'm seriously out of it if I can't rationalize the details of some of my favorite organism
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And, after pondering gender of merfolk for a moment (well, more along the lines of tying to figure out what gender this one was) I just wondered how humans would react to them if they actually met them. 'Cause you know how politically correct some people are, right? So, the poor human(s) would be trying to figure out what gender the merfolk person was with varying types of comments and questions while trying to be subtle about it, with the merfolk all amused and purposely avoiding the question, because I mean, isn't it totally obvious what gender they are, look at the spots.
*fondly remembers obsession with the movie Little Mermaid*
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(I think I had him as a he in my head, but now I don't know anymore) Undersea gender [sex] is amazing and would absolutely blow the minds of a lot of people if they knew about it. Example: Clownfish can change their sex if there is an unbalance in the populations. Not enough males? A female will become one given a little bit of time. So... Nemos' dad? May very well have been a mother at one point. (I told a girl a little younger than me this the other day, and her reaction was just priceless) Not to mention all the animals that are hermaphroditic and are both male and female at the same time. *is fascinated by nature's way of continuing life without being bound to the human preferred view of two set sexes*
The...spots? *confused* I didn't think gulpers were dimorphic.