Fortune Telling Collection - Horoscope - Are the seeds in the little sea rabbit artificially made?

Are the seeds in the little sea rabbit artificially made?

The seeds in the little sea rabbit are not artificially made. The seeds in the little sea rabbit are all bought in the seed production season, so you will feel that there are many seeds. The seeds of sea rabbits are rich in protein, fat, vitamins A and D, minerals and other nutrients. They are also excellent seafood supplements, and moderate consumption is beneficial to people's health. The seeds in the little sea rabbit are sea rabbit eggs, and the sea rabbit seeds are edible.

Sea rabbit seeds can be eaten by themselves, and sea rabbit sauce is prepared by coastal fishermen on the spot. What coastal residents call sea vermicelli is the dried product of jelly, silk and egg packets of sea rabbits, also called sea vermicelli and dried sea noodles.

Morphological characteristics of sea rabbits

Sea rabbits are not rabbits. The two pairs of antennae on the head of the sea rabbit protrude like rabbit ears, and the body is smooth or has many protrusions. The antenna has a clear division of labor, the front pair is slightly shorter, specializing in touch, and the back pair is slightly longer, specializing in smell. When the sea rabbit crawls on the bottom of the sea, a pair of antennae behind it are separated into a figure of eight and extend obliquely forward to smell the surrounding smells. When resting, the tentacles immediately come together and go straight up, just like the two long ears of a rabbit.

When not moving, it looks like a small white rabbit squatting on the ground, with a pair of big ears, so it was first called a sea rabbit by the Romans. After being recognized by the world, the sea rabbit got its name. The Japanese call it the rain tiger. Sea rabbits are small in size, generally only 10 cm in length and 130 g in weight. Their bodies are oval and will be deformed during exercise.

Sea rabbits are not mammals, and there is no fur outside. It belongs to Gastropoda of Mollusca. The sea rabbit has no calcareous shell, but degenerates into a thin and transparent horny shell without spiral. They are buried under the back mantle and cannot be seen from the outside. Instead, their backs are covered with a thin translucent horny membrane. Thin shell skin is generally white with pearl luster.