A Tiny Shrimp Snaps Its Claw In Less Than 0

A tiny shrimp snaps its claw in less than 0.01 seconds, around 10,000 times quicker than the blink of a human eye. 
The movement is so rapid it creates an audible pop above the water and produces bubbles.
Males of the species Dulichiella cf.

appendiculata are only tiny, roughly the size of a sunflower seed, but 30 per cent of their body weight comes from its one huge claw. 
The engorged claw shuts in just 93 microseconds, moving at around 38 mph. Human eyes take about 150 milliseconds to complete the process of blinking. 
Males of the species Dulichiella cf.

appendiculata are only tiny, Garnelenhaus less than a centimeter long, but 30 per cent of their body weight comes from one huge claw. (pictured bottom right of image, the large claw)
<div class="art-ins mol-factbox floatRHS sciencetech" data-version="2" id="mol-fb89f7f0-6ada-11eb-aab1-4f1090694957" website shrimp snaps its giant claw shut 10,000 times faster than a blink