1 00:00:02,040 --> 00:00:07,520 Speaker 1: Welcome to brain Stuff from How Stuff Works. Hey, brain stuff, 2 00:00:07,520 --> 00:00:11,880 Speaker 1: this is Christian Seger. Lagoons are famous for creepy swamp creatures, 3 00:00:11,880 --> 00:00:16,640 Speaker 1: but in a Canadian park in Vancouver, British Columbia, scientists 4 00:00:16,640 --> 00:00:22,320 Speaker 1: have found something possibly just as outlandish, A slimy, gelatinous 5 00:00:22,480 --> 00:00:26,040 Speaker 1: brain blob. Well, okay, it's not really a brain, and 6 00:00:26,079 --> 00:00:29,080 Speaker 1: it's not really even an it. It's a collection of 7 00:00:29,120 --> 00:00:34,880 Speaker 1: tiny creatures. Collectively called a magnificent brio zoan, or also 8 00:00:34,920 --> 00:00:40,080 Speaker 1: known by its Latin name as Pectinatella magnifica. This colony 9 00:00:40,240 --> 00:00:43,440 Speaker 1: forms a brain shaped mass that can grow to be 10 00:00:43,560 --> 00:00:46,640 Speaker 1: larger than a human head. And I think we can 11 00:00:46,680 --> 00:00:51,440 Speaker 1: all agree that's also really weird, now, Brian Zowan's. Sometimes 12 00:00:51,479 --> 00:00:55,520 Speaker 1: they're also called moss animals. They're an ancient group of 13 00:00:55,600 --> 00:00:59,320 Speaker 1: filter feeders. The earliest fossil evidence of one of these 14 00:00:59,360 --> 00:01:03,040 Speaker 1: colonies can be dated back about four hundred and seventy 15 00:01:03,280 --> 00:01:10,280 Speaker 1: million years. Individually, each tiny invertebrate, called a zooid, can 16 00:01:10,319 --> 00:01:13,440 Speaker 1: just barely be seen with the naked eye. It's only 17 00:01:13,520 --> 00:01:18,039 Speaker 1: about half a millimeter or about point zero two inches long, 18 00:01:18,440 --> 00:01:21,920 Speaker 1: but when hundreds of them assemble, they can glue themselves 19 00:01:21,959 --> 00:01:28,080 Speaker 1: together with a special protein to form all sorts of shapes, sheets, columns, 20 00:01:28,160 --> 00:01:34,040 Speaker 1: and even branched tree like structures. Now actually fossilized. Briozoans 21 00:01:34,080 --> 00:01:38,000 Speaker 1: are among the world's most abundant fossils as well, and 22 00:01:38,080 --> 00:01:41,760 Speaker 1: you can find them in rocks originating more than four 23 00:01:41,840 --> 00:01:46,040 Speaker 1: hundred and fifty million years ago up until the present. 24 00:01:46,520 --> 00:01:50,240 Speaker 1: Their colonies start with a single zooid, which a sexually 25 00:01:50,320 --> 00:01:54,720 Speaker 1: reproduces until it's got an entire army of clones to 26 00:01:54,760 --> 00:01:59,320 Speaker 1: hang out with. Most briozoan species live in marine habitats, 27 00:01:59,360 --> 00:02:04,680 Speaker 1: but the one found in Vancouver's Stanley Park belongs in freshwater. 28 00:02:05,080 --> 00:02:09,480 Speaker 1: It just doesn't really belong in Vancouver, Canada. This August, 29 00:02:09,560 --> 00:02:14,600 Speaker 1: the Stanley Park Ecology Society held its annual bio Blitz, 30 00:02:14,639 --> 00:02:18,480 Speaker 1: a community event in which citizens scientists survey the park, 31 00:02:18,840 --> 00:02:23,000 Speaker 1: identifying hundreds of organisms in twenty four hours. In the 32 00:02:23,160 --> 00:02:28,239 Speaker 1: Lost Lagoon, which is the park's biofiltration pond, Blitz goers 33 00:02:28,280 --> 00:02:33,960 Speaker 1: discovered the giant, slimy football shaped brio Zonan, thousands of 34 00:02:34,000 --> 00:02:38,600 Speaker 1: miles from home. Their usual range is decidedly to the 35 00:02:38,639 --> 00:02:42,520 Speaker 1: south of Canada and east of the Mississippi River, and 36 00:02:42,560 --> 00:02:45,639 Speaker 1: it turns out This isn't the first time a magnificent 37 00:02:45,720 --> 00:02:48,799 Speaker 1: Brian zone has been found in this part of Canada, 38 00:02:49,120 --> 00:02:53,000 Speaker 1: and nobody can tell whether they're staying either, but why 39 00:02:53,120 --> 00:02:57,040 Speaker 1: they're there is a different question. Like with most migrating 40 00:02:57,160 --> 00:03:01,560 Speaker 1: organisms these days, warming global tem pictures might have opened 41 00:03:01,560 --> 00:03:05,399 Speaker 1: the door of the Great White North to these probably 42 00:03:05,639 --> 00:03:11,000 Speaker 1: ecologically harmless blobs. They need a water temperature warmer than 43 00:03:11,080 --> 00:03:15,480 Speaker 1: sixty degrees fahrenheit or sixteen degrees celsius in order to 44 00:03:15,560 --> 00:03:23,520 Speaker 1: make a go of it. Today's episode was written by 45 00:03:23,600 --> 00:03:27,200 Speaker 1: Jescelyn Shields, produced by Dylan Fagan, and for more on 46 00:03:27,240 --> 00:03:30,240 Speaker 1: this and other topics, please visit us at how stuff 47 00:03:30,280 --> 00:03:42,000 Speaker 1: works dot com.