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10 votes
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Elephants call each other by name, study finds
35 votes -
It's weirder than I thought. How cicadas make noise (in ultra slow motion).
21 votes -
Scientists figured out why orcas have been sinking boats for the last four years [turns out it's juveniles just having fun]
47 votes -
Playing with the kids is important work for chimpanzee mothers
7 votes -
Exploring the mysterious alphabet of sperm whales
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Wild Orangutan observed using first aid on a wound
28 votes -
Scientists studied how cicadas pee. Their insights could shed light on fluid dynamics.
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Chimp moms play with their offspring through good times and bad
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Magpies swoop bald men more often, eight-year-old's viral survey finds
34 votes -
As the sun falls over a vast Danish marshland, more than a million starlings undulate in mesmerising murmurations – but how they do it remains mysterious
11 votes -
Reindeer combine sleeping and digesting, Norwegian researchers found after extracting reindeer brain data
9 votes -
Rats have an imagination, new research finds
57 votes -
Brainless jellyfish demonstrate learning ability
Veronique Greenwood In the dappled sunlit waters of Caribbean mangrove forests, tiny box jellyfish bob in and out of the shade. Box jellies are distinguished from true jellyfish in part by their...
Veronique Greenwood
In the dappled sunlit waters of Caribbean mangrove forests, tiny box jellyfish bob in and out of the shade. Box jellies are distinguished from true jellyfish in part by their complex visual system — the grape-size predators have 24 eyes. But like other jellyfish, they are brainless, controlling their cube-shaped bodies with a distributed network of neurons.
tap/click to know more...
That network, it turns out, is more sophisticated than you might assume. On Friday, researchers published a report in the journal Current Biology indicating that the box jellyfish species Tripedalia cystophora have the ability to learn. Because box jellyfish diverged from our part of the animal kingdom long ago, understanding their cognitive abilities could help scientists trace the evolution of learning.
The tricky part about studying learning in box jellies was finding an everyday behavior that scientists could train the creatures to perform in the lab.
- Roots of mangroves
Anders Garm, a biologist at the University of Copenhagen and an author of the new paper, said his team decided to focus on a swift about-face that box jellies execute when they are about to hit a mangrove root. These roots rise through the water like black towers, while the water around them appears pale by comparison. But the contrast between the two can change from day to day, as silt clouds the water and makes it more difficult to tell how far away a root is. How do box jellies tell when they are getting too close?
“The hypothesis was, they need to learn this,” Garm said. “When they come back to these habitats, they have to learn, how is today’s water quality? How is the contrast changing today?”
- Setup
In the lab, researchers produced images of alternating dark and light stripes, representing the mangrove roots and water, and used them to line the insides of buckets about six inches wide. When the stripes were a stark black and white, representing optimum water clarity, box jellies never got close to the bucket walls. With less contrast between the stripes, however, box jellies immediately began to run into them. This was the scientists’ chance to see if they would learn.
After a handful of collisions, the box jellies changed their behavior. Less than eight minutes after arriving in the bucket, they were swimming 50% farther from the pattern on the walls, and they had nearly quadrupled the number of times they performed their about-face maneuver. They seemed to have made a connection between the stripes ahead of them and the sensation of collision.
- “It’s amazing to see how fast they learn,”
Going further, researchers removed visual neurons from the box jellyfish and studied them in a dish. The cells were shown striped images while receiving a small electrical pulse to represent collision. Within about five minutes, the cells started sending the signal that would cause a whole box jellyfish to turn around.
“It’s amazing to see how fast they learn,” said Jan Bielecki, a postdoctoral researcher at the Institute of Physiology at Kiel University in Germany, also an author of the paper.
Researchers who were not involved in the study called the results a significant step forward in understanding the origins of learning. “This is only the third time that associative learning has been convincingly demonstrated in cnidarians,” a group that includes sea anemones, hydras and jellyfish, said Ken Cheng, a professor at Macquarie University in Sydney, Australia, who studies the animals. “And this is the coolest demonstration, replete with physiological data.”
The results also suggest that box jellyfish possess some level of short-term memory, because they can change their behavior based on past experience, said Michael Abrams, a postdoctoral researcher at the University of California, Berkeley, who studies the neuroscience of jellyfish sleep. He wonders how long the box jellies remember what they’ve learned. If they are taken out of the tank for an hour and then returned to it, do they have to learn what to do all over again?
Future work
In future work, researchers hope to identify which specific cells control the box jellyfish’s ability to learn from experience. Garm and his colleagues are curious about the molecular changes that happen in these cells as the animals incorporate new information into their behavior.
They wonder, too, whether the capacity to learn is universal among nerve cells, regardless of whether they are part of a brain. It might explain their peculiar persistence in the tree of life.
“There are organ systems popping up and going away all the time,” Garm said. “But nervous systems — once they are there, they very rarely go away again.”
Perhaps the ability to learn is one reason they are still here.
Seattle Times - Link to the article
9 votes -
A new study uncovers liver flukes' savvy manipulation of ants, making them climate-aware zombies
17 votes -
Study of multiple species shows birds with more complex vocal skills are better problem-solvers
11 votes -
The veery thrush will time its migrations months in advance to avoid dangerous storms in the Atlantic Ocean. How are these birds so attuned to the climate?
14 votes -
Charles Henry Turner’s insights into animal behavior were a century ahead of their time
4 votes -
The reshuffling of neurons during fruit fly metamorphosis suggests that larval memories don’t persist in adults
27 votes -
Crows and magpies using anti-bird spikes to build nests, researchers find
50 votes -
Parrots taught to video call each other become less lonely, finds research
10 votes -
The extraordinary case of the ferocious female moles
15 votes -
Gray whales in Baja California frequently interact with humans in a remarkable shift. They were known to fight back when harpooned, even damaging boats, earning the nickname "devil fish."
https://www.businessinsider.com/gray-whales-or-devil-fish-friendly-to-humans-baffling-scientists-2023-7#:~:text=Gray%20whales%20were%20nicknamed%20'devil,humans%20pet%20them%2C%20baffling%20scienti...
Gray whales put up such a fight against whalers and their boats they earned the nickname "devil fish." Today, in the same places where the whales were hunted to the brink of extinction just decades ago, they swim right up to boats, enchanting and even befriending the people in them.
One of those remarkable encounters was captured in March in the Ojo de Liebre, a lagoon in Mexico's Baja Peninsula. The video showed a gray whale right beside a boat, allowing the captain to pick whale lice off its head.
Although some thought the whale was purposefully going to the captain for help with the whale lice — which are actually crustaceans, not insects — experts told Insider that's probably not the case.
Still, the fact that the gray whales of the Baja lagoons interact with boats and humans at all baffles researchers.
"This is what's so strange. They were hunted almost to extinction," Andrew Trites, director of the Marine Mammal Research Unit at the University of British Columbia, told Insider. "You would think being near a person in a boat is the last thing the few remaining gray whales would've ever done and they would've had this disposition to avoid them at all costs, the few that survived."
(article continues)
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Octopuses sleep—and possibly dream—just like humans
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Stressed rattlesnakes found to calm down in the company of a nearby 'friend'
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Trace amounts of antidepressants cause behavioral changes in crayfish, potentially making them more vulnerable to predators
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Octopuses may have vivid nightmares, video suggests
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It's the Matrix, but for locusts
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The myth of the alpha wolf
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With ships, birds find an easier way to travel
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First account of apparent alloparental care of a long-finned pilot whale calf by a female killer whale near Snæfellsnes, in west Iceland
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How artificial intelligence is helping us decode animal languages
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How do fireflies flash in sync? Studies suggest a new answer.
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This animal’s behavior is mechanically programmed
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Brown bears switch habitats in the spring so they can hunt reindeer and moose calves, researchers have said
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Japan’s monkey queen faces challenge to her reign: mating season
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Why insects are more sensitive than they seem
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Promethean beasts - Far from being hardwired to flee fire, some animals use it to their own ends, helping us understand our own pyrocognition
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Australian musk ducks have the ability to call you a ‘bloody fool,’ research finds
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Female octopuses throw things at males that are harassing them
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Mimicry: When animals copy other animals
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The doomed mouse utopia that inspired the ‘Rats of NIMH’. Dr. John Bumpass Calhoun spent the ’60s and ’70s playing god to thousands of rodents.
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Book review: Are We Smart Enough To Know How Smart Animals Are?
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How is this horse feeling? New mobile brain wave reader could tell
2 votes -
Pigs can play video games with their snouts, scientists find
8 votes -
Canada's sparrows are singing a new song. You'll hear it soon
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Shimmering schools of fish have dazzled scientists for centuries with their synchronized maneuvers. Now, high-speed video is revealing how—and why—they do it
6 votes -
Wild orangutans learn to wash with soap
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Upside-down jellyfish lob tiny grenades to kill prey
9 votes