Iran Daily

2017 delivered amazing biology finds from organisms large and small

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2017 revealed some surprising biology of organisms large and small, from quick-dozing elephants to carbondump­ing sea creatures.

Here are some surprising biology of organisms which scientists discovered.

Homegrown:

Giant larvaceans don’t have noses, but they sure know how to blow snot bubbles.

The sea invertebra­tes live in disposable ‘mucus houses’ that, based on recent observatio­ns, collect food fast.

When these larvaceans ditch a dirty house and ‘sneeze’ themselves a new one, they might send a lot of carbon to the deep sea.

Blood and guts:

Antarctic-dwelling sea spiders use their long legs for more than creepy-crawling below the ice.

Stretches of digestive tract in the creatures’ legs do double duty — not only digesting meals, but also pumping an arthropod version of blood and oxygen through the rest of the body.

Fluorescen­t fashion:

South American polka dot tree frogs are the first amphibians known to naturally fluoresce. The frogs’ intense blue-green glow might play a role in complex courtship and fighting behaviors, biologists propose.

Brainless beauty sleep:

Upsidedown jellyfish are the first brainless animals known to sleep, lab experiment­s suggest. The finding raises new questions about when and why sleep evolved.

Pachyderm power nap:

For some wild elephants, a good night’s sleep ends soon after it starts. Electronic monitoring of two African elephants found that the animals snooze about two hours per day — the shortest sleep requiremen­t recorded for mammals.

Heads up:

Chop off a hydra’s head, and two more grow in its place — or so the ancient Greek myth goes.

By fiddling with the cytoskelet­ons of real-life hydras, researcher­s found that the pond polyps rely on mechanical forces as well as molecular cues to regenerate head and tentacles in the right places.

Balancing act:

Flamingos may be more stable standing on one leg than two, especially when asleep, researcher­s reported.

The blushing bird’s center of gravity is located near its tucked-in knee, which helps with stability.

A one-legged stance requires little muscular effort, the scientists said, but others caution that it may not be an

Ultimate survivor:

Tardigrade­s are known for withstandi­ng extreme temperatur­es, intense radiation and even the vacuum of space.

Those adaptation­s could help this hardy lineage survive until Earth is engulfed by the Sun in several billion years, researcher­s estimate.

An analysis of the microscopi­c water bears’ genetic blueprints offers clues to their survival strategies, and challenges claims that tardigrade­s are extreme gene swappers.

Paint it blue:

Scientists borrowed a gene each from Canterbury bells and butterfly peas to breed the world’s first true blue chrysanthe­mums.

The method could be used to give other flower species the blues.

 ??  ?? japantimes.co.jp
japantimes.co.jp
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sciencenew­s.org
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sciencenew­s.org
 ??  ?? chicagotri­bune.com
chicagotri­bune.com
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hakaimagaz­ine.com
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sciencenew­s.org
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nbcnews.com

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