155 points
*

Kinda but not quite:

Costasiella kuroshimae are capable of a physiological process called kleptoplasty, in which they retain the chloroplasts from the algae they feed on. Absorbing the chloroplasts from algae then enables them to indirectly perform photosynthesis.[6]

Source: Costasiella kuroshimae

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66 points
*

And I’m pretty sure there are also jellyfish that live in symbyosis with algae that they carry along with them which photosynthesize, creating sugars for the jellyfish.

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21 points

homo sapiens is known to use photosynthesis through symbiotic relationships with various grasses to create sugars, lipids, and proteins for itself

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16 points

Eh, that’s a few dozen steps removed. By that standard, every herbivore β€œuses” photosynthesis.

These guys (coral & lichen too) use photosynthesis much more directly, completely encapsulating the algea and supporting it internally. It’s much closer to mitochondria.

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13 points
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35 points

So vampire photosynthesis.

That’s metal af.

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1 point

Or rogue photosynthesis.

Also metal af

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19 points

I mean honestly? If you’re not even keeping full cells from the prey, I think we can give it to them. Lil guy, you can photosynthesize. No need to bother them with the asterisks.

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10 points

The really interesting thing about costasiella kuroshimae is that its digestive system branches and goes up into all of those β€˜leaves’, which is how the algae makes its way there to have its chloroplasts extracted.

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9 points

kleptoplasty

I like how it’s appropriate to call it β€œ-plasty” twice (first in the referring to chloroplasts sense, and then again in the plastic surgery sense).

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2 points

So it’s MegaMan?

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49 points

This is a god damn Pokemon.

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28 points

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1 point

YES

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45 points

Before you fantasize how this could be used in humans in the future, producing that single thought cost more energy than leaf sheep produce via photosynthesis in their lifetime - feeding of it requires energy efficiency any warm-blooded animal just isn’t suited for.

Still cute though.

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12 points

Not chlorophyll, but retinol. Purple solar powered humanoids.

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7 points

The human of the future:

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1 point
Deleted by creator
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34 points
*

Pass. Charmander would wreck this guy.

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28 points

I doubt that seeing is how this thing lives in the ocean

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4 points

Charmander is a great driving force of global warming, this poor thing will be extinct in the blink of a great many eyes.

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2 points

Agreed, this feels like a water pokemon that can learn solar beam/solar blade, absorb, giga drain, etc.

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2 points

Lol, grass types live in the forest.

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2 points

Lotad has entered the chat

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3 points

RIght? Was literally in the middle of calling it a Pokemon when I saw this.

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26 points

they aren’t the only animal that does it: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kleptoplasty#Animals

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