When 'teeth marks' appeared in cables of an underwater camera system in the Bahamas and the camera cut out, the scientists in charge began to look around for a cuplrit.
Edd Brooks of the Bahamas Cape Eleuthera Institute took a closer look at the cables and found that the teeth marks looked like a huge crustacean had gnawed on them.
The truth was even stranger: they were under attack from a foot long undersea woodlouse.
'There’s nothing else with mandibles that sharp,' says Brooks. 'It was a Bathynomus attack.'
The beast normally lives 8,500ft under water. Called the Bathynomus Giganteus, it is a super-sized cousin of the humble woodlouse
Its legs are arranged in seven pairs, and its front two are able to manipulate and bring food to its four sets of jaws
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