tangledwing, to science
@tangledwing@ohai.social avatar

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w2-T4pVZRuE The Golden Tortoise Beetle only inhabits specific areas within the outer boundaries of N. America, primarily the eastern and western US. Only inhabiting regions rich in sweet potato & related plants like morning glories and bindweeds. #biology #ecology #science #nature #insects

jhilden, to science
@jhilden@vis.social avatar

Not sure, but feels like one thing about genes that is generally not popular knowledge is that it is all about interacting chemical gradients over time. So uhh if trying an analogy here… more like building sounds with a synth than blueprints of a building. Maybe someone actually expert in this has a better popularization? #genetics #biology

https://bio.libretexts.org/Bookshelves/Introductory_and_General_Biology/Biology_(Kimball)/14%3A_Embryonic_Development_and_its_Regulation/14.05%3A_Segmentation_-_Organizing_the_Embryo

UP8, to Futurology
@UP8@mastodon.social avatar
jake4480, (edited ) to science
@jake4480@c.im avatar

Robots still can't outrun the fastest animals because millions of years of evolution + tissue and bone make for more agility, flexibility, etc. 🤯 Fascinating stuff https://www.sciencealert.com/theres-a-surprising-reason-why-robots-cant-outrun-the-fastest-animals

gutenberg_org, to books
@gutenberg_org@mastodon.social avatar

American geneticist Nettie Stevens died #OTD in 1912.

In 1905, Stevens published a pivotal paper detailing her observations on the mealworm beetle, Tenebrio molitor. She identified that male mealworms had a pair of unequal-sized chromosomes, while females had two X chromosomes. This discovery supported the theory that sex is determined by specific chromosomes, a significant advancement in the field of genetics.

Books by Nettie Stevens at PG:
https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/author/35315

#books #biology #genetics

Book cover for "Studies in Spermatogenesis (Part 1 of 2)" by N. M. Stevens, featuring an abstract geometric design in red and blue on a navy background, with the Project Gutenberg logo at the bottom.

tangledwing, to science
@tangledwing@ohai.social avatar

Tip of a butterfly tongue. Dr. Stephen S. Nagy. Montana, USA. 750x.
Butterflies have chemoreceptors, or nerve cells that open onto the surface of their exoskeleton & react to the presence of different chemicals. #butterflies #biology #science #photography #nature #wildlife

UP8, to Futurology
@UP8@mastodon.social avatar

🦠 The GMO tooth microbe that is supposed to prevent cavities

https://arstechnica.com/?p=2018793

tangledwing, to science
@tangledwing@ohai.social avatar

Live water mount of Hydra viridissima (freshwater cnidarian) capturing Daphnia pulex (freshwater crustacean). Dr. Stephen Lowry. University of Ulster. Darkfield.
Magnification
10x

thejapantimes, to worldnews
@thejapantimes@mastodon.social avatar

When it comes to aging, we tend to assume that cognition gets worse as we get older. But that’s not the case for everyone. Enter the "super-ager." https://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/2024/04/30/world/science-health/super-agers-brains/ #worldnews #sciencehealth #aging #elderly #biology

lentrichard, to Battlemaps
@lentrichard@ecoevo.social avatar
ergative, to science
@ergative@wandering.shop avatar

Hi, folks! I've got a set of nano-reviews up at Nerds of a Feather!

Live Long and Evolve: A non-fiction book by an evolutionary biologist about what life on other planets might look like, charmingly interwoven with relevant Star Trek lore.

The Extractionist: a very Cyber futurist heisty type book, which I found well constructed but somehow dull

THe Frame-Up_Magical art thieves. Perfectly fine, but not special.

http://www.nerds-feather.com/2024/04/nanoreviews-live-long-and-evolve.html

@bookstodon #bookReviews #amReading #sff #biology

nmronline, to bioinformatics
@nmronline@mstdn.science avatar

We've answered ALL of our current design and engineering aims!

We're also looking forward to talking to some influential people, and forming some great agreements.

@bioinformatics @biophysics @chemistry @compchem @nmrchat @strucbio

ScienceDesk, to science
@ScienceDesk@flipboard.social avatar

A forest in Utah made of a single tree known as Pando has 47,000 stems and has amassed 6,000 metric tons of life in its thousands of years on Earth. It’s the largest living organism on the planet in terms of mass. Naturally, something that large and old has something to say, and recordings released this year let us “hear” it like never before. More from Science Alert: https://flip.it/PSwxIA

floating, to science
@floating@babka.social avatar

Interesting study investigating cell-membrane ion gradients as a "nongenomic information system" informing cellular decision making.

https://phys.org/news/2024-04-cells-hidden-communication.html

eugenialoli, to cycling
@eugenialoli@mastodon.social avatar

We totally randomly met two riders this morning near our home, apparently they're traveling around & with bicycles. They are a & couple. We invited them at my mom's home and we all had lunch together. Apparently they are candidates in , one in and the other one in . Very interesting young people. It was a good day today.

plazi_species, to China
@plazi_species@mastodon.green avatar
plazi_species, to science
@plazi_species@mastodon.green avatar
plazi_species, to thailand
@plazi_species@mastodon.green avatar
plazi_species, to science
@plazi_species@mastodon.green avatar
plazi_species, to China
@plazi_species@mastodon.green avatar
plazi_species, to science
@plazi_species@mastodon.green avatar
plazi_species, to india
@plazi_species@mastodon.green avatar
shekinahcancook, to evolution
@shekinahcancook@babka.social avatar

Mother nature has already decided what to develop after humans make ourselves extinct, apparently.

https://www.iflscience.com/the-once-in-an-eon-event-that-gave-earth-plants-has-happened-again-73878

tangledwing, to nature
@tangledwing@ohai.social avatar

Varied Thrush (Ixoreus naevius), males have black backs and wings, with bright orange breasts and bellies. Females are similar, but duller overall. Native to western North America. #nature #photo #biology #wildlife #birds

ScienceDesk, to animals
@ScienceDesk@flipboard.social avatar

The first glow-in-the-dark animals may have been ancient corals deep in the ocean.

AP quotes a new study's author: "Light signaling is one of the earliest forms of communication that we know of — it’s very important in deep waters.”

https://flip.it/qJ2-nM

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