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8 votes
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The secret life of deep sea vents
16 votes -
Bees just wanna have fungi - a review of bee associations with nonpathogenic fungi
12 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."
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10 votes -
Can probiotics protect corals from problems like bleaching?
8 votes -
AI tools are designing entirely new proteins that could transform medicine
12 votes -
Specimens are deteriorating at the Florida State Collection of Arthropods; this neglect could interfere with research
https://undark.org/2023/07/05/neglect-of-a-museums-collection-could-cause-scientific-setbacks/ IN A DUSTY ROOM in central Florida, countless millipedes, centipedes, and other creepy-crawlies sit...
https://undark.org/2023/07/05/neglect-of-a-museums-collection-could-cause-scientific-setbacks/
IN A DUSTY ROOM in central Florida, countless millipedes, centipedes, and other creepy-crawlies sit in specimen jars, rotting. The invertebrates are part of the Florida State Collection of Arthropods in Gainesville, which totals more than 12 million insects and other arthropod specimens, and are used by expert curators to identify pest species that threaten Florida’s native and agricultural plants.
However, not all specimens at the facility are treated equally, according to two people who have seen the collection firsthand. They say non-insect samples, like shrimp and millipedes, that are stored in ethanol have been neglected to the point of being irreversibly damaged or lost completely.
When it comes to how the FSCA stacks up with other collections she’s worked in, Ann Dunn, a former curatorial assistant, is blunt: “This is the worst I’ve ever seen.”
Experts say the loss of such specimens — even uncharismatic ones such as centipedes — is a setback for science. Particularly invaluable are holotypes, which are the example specimens that determine the description for an entire species. In fact, the variety of holotypes a collection has is often more important than its size, since those specimens are actively used for research, said Ainsley Seago, an associate curator of invertebrate zoology at the Carnegie Museum of Natural History in Pittsburgh.
A paper published in March 2023 highlighted the importance of museum specimens more generally, for addressing urgent issues like climate change and wildlife conservation, with 73 of the world’s largest natural history museums estimating their total collections to exceed 1.1 billion specimens. “This global collection,” the authors write, “is the physical basis for our understanding of the natural world and our place in it.”
9 votes -
The surprisingly sinister history behind Texas’s cliff chirping frog
5 votes -
Saving the Red Handfish from extinction
7 votes -
Octopuses sleep—and possibly dream—just like humans
36 votes -
Having an out-of-body experience? Blame this sausage-shaped piece of your brain
10 votes -
Neglect of a museum’s collection could cause scientific setbacks at Florida State
12 votes -
When plants feed on fungi: Novel method enables unrestricted isotope analyses
9 votes -
Injection of kidney protein improves working memory in monkeys
9 votes -
Scientists discover second deep-sea octopus nursery off of Costa Rica
32 votes -
The incredible latent abilities of living things — slime mould is amazing!
23 votes -
What can jellyfish teach about fluid dynamics - Interview with engineering professor John Dabiri
9 votes -
Purple variety of cannabis could save pot farms struggling with diseased plants
10 votes -
Cat noses contain twisted labyrinths that help them separate smells
13 votes -
Trace amounts of antidepressants cause behavioral changes in crayfish, potentially making them more vulnerable to predators
14 votes -
What animal or insect going extinct would have the greatest impact on the ecosystem?
Curious on some replies here. I always hear having bees go extinct would be horrible for us. Curious if that’s the worse?
36 votes -
This week in virology 1018: Clinical update
7 votes -
Scientists develop new birth control for female cats—no surgery necessary
12 votes -
Creatures that don't conform: Slime molds and their fascinating existence
28 votes -
Cambridge-Caltech team of scientists claim to have created synthetic human embryos from stem cells at conference; work not yet published
29 votes -
The Great Southern Reef is an extensive and valuable ecosystem … that not very many people know about
14 votes -
Photosynthesis, key to life on Earth, starts with a single photon
5 votes -
Neuroscientists show that brain waves synchronize when people interact
11 votes -
Why Koko the gorilla couldn't talk
13 votes -
Controversial research project in Norway on whales' hearing suspended after a whale drowns
8 votes -
Nanoplastic ingestion causes neurological deficits
8 votes -
The unique merger that made you (and ewe, and yew)
10 votes -
Scales or feathers? It all comes down to a few genes
8 votes -
Octopuses may have vivid nightmares, video suggests
5 votes -
How is AI impacting science?
4 votes -
Why the brain’s connections to the body are crisscrossed
6 votes -
How our team overturned the ninety-year-old metaphor of a ‘little man’ in the brain who controls movement
4 votes -
It's the Matrix, but for locusts
5 votes -
The myth of the alpha wolf
6 votes -
Breakthrough as eggs made from male mice cells
7 votes -
Buried deep in the permafrost, the Svalbard Global Seed Vault is opening its doors to the world with the launch of a new virtual tour to mark its fifteenth anniversary
9 votes -
Researchers successfully prevent peanut allergic reactions in mice, blocking onset in its tracks
5 votes -
“What If?” Eleven serious answers to slightly crazy science questions
3 votes -
Scientists use CRISPR to insert an alligator gene into a catfish. Disease kills off 40% of farmed catfish. This gene protects them.
8 votes -
Excessive outbreaks of seaweed are clogging up our waters – now the algae is being harvested alongside farmed crops to create ingredients for cosmetics and food products
5 votes -
Expanding the brain. Literally.
3 votes -
Zombie parasites
3 votes -
The US government is giving out free wasps
8 votes -
How do fireflies flash in sync? Studies suggest a new answer.
3 votes -
US bat species devastated by fungus now listed as endangered
2 votes