They are the smallest of snakes. Their closest relatives, however, are the gigantic boas and pythons. Judging from their wide distribution—on such isolated spots, for example, as Christmas Island in the Indian Ocean—they are quite ancient reptiles whose wanderings started about fifty million years ago.

They are found most often in termite nests, where they eat the eggs and possibly the larvae. Small earthworms and other soil creatures add to their diet. The worm snakes are almost toothless. Eyes are buried under skin, are only faint spots, and probably only can discriminate light from darkness. The tail looks somewhat like the head—a likeness presumably developed as a camouflage. They retain a snake’s scales, but these are highly polished so they can be of no help in crawling.

These Typhlopidae and Glauconidae, as the two major groups are known, are extremely active. When they are exhumed they start at once to burrow back and have been found as much as two feet underground. Occasionally they may be found in mole holes or in rotten wood where they feed on insect larvae and also, it is likely, get some warmth from the decay process. The snout is used in burrowing. They are hard to hold in the hand, owing to the high polish of the scales. There are approximately 100 species scattered over the world, two coming as far north as the Texas border. They have teeth in only one jaw—the upper jaw for Typhlopidae, the lower for Glauconidae.

A Porcupine of the Sea

Among the weirdest creatures of the deep is also one of the latest to become known to science—the sea urchin (closely related to star fish) astropyga magnifica. It is the largest sea urchin yet found in the Atlantic. It has approximately 200 bright blue eyes arranged in double rows. The body is covered with several hundred sharp, barbed black spines nearly a foot long.

That so conspicuous an animal, living in such a densely populated region—one of the most intensively studied in the world by biologists—should have remained undiscovered so long probably is due to two reasons. First, if its habits are at all comparable to those of its nearest relatives, it is strictly nocturnal and comes out to forage on the coral sands of the shallow sea bottom only after light has ceased to penetrate the water. During the day the creatures remain secluded, often congregated in great numbers, in holes and caves of the sea floor and under the coral.

Second, it is quite similar in appearance to another smaller member of the sea urchin race with spines as much as 18 inches long which is greatly dreaded and is even reputed to have caused the death of children who have fallen on it. Anybody coming upon a daytime bed-chamber of these fantastic creatures would be likely to leave them strictly alone.

This particular sea urchin is especially interesting in the development of its eyes. These appear to be true sight organs. If a hand is placed in the water near one of the animals the long barbs immediately are pointed in the direction of the intrusion, and as the hand moves the barbs move. Such a creature is practically impregnable. It never, however, takes the offensive. It cannot “throw” its barbs, but they enter the flesh easily and cause painful local irritation. Some species inject a virulent poison which may even kill a human being. There is no evidence that this species is toxic.

Astropyga magnifica, which has more the appearance of a porcupine than of any other land animal, is a scavenger of the sea bottom. It gathers and devours the accumulated debris that falls through the water. It never kills its own food, so far as is known. It has five sharp teeth in its mouth, located on its under surface, with which it can chew away the flesh of dead animals.

This sea porcupine has a peculiar system of locomotion in common with most of its relatives. It has literally thousands of sucker-like feet, which are hollow and attached to tubes within its shell. It moves by forcing water through the tubes and into the particular “feet” which it wishes to use. When these are out of use they are contracted by withdrawing the water. Being a radially symmetrical animal, the creature can move with equal ease in any direction. It has no head—that is, the development of its nervous system and the direction of its locomotion are not fixed in a forward direction, as is the case with vertebrates and insects.