Monday, January 21, 2008

World's weirdest amphibians!

As advertised:

World's weirdest amphibians

Who else thinks the giant salamander is creepy?

Thursday, January 10, 2008

Ants, Acacia trees, and herbivores

It's well known that acacia trees produce food bodies and offer nesting sites for ants, which help it to defend against herbivores that feed on the tree's leaves. But what happens when the herbivores are removed? The trees paradoxically grow sicker and lose leaves. Apparently when herbivores are not browsing on the leaves, the trees reduce their investment in providing resources to the ants, and the ants start to leave the trees. This allows the establishment of wood-boring beetles which bore tunnels into the wood of the trees, causing them to weaken. Amazing! It's like playing Jenga.

Tuesday, January 8, 2008

Monarch Butterfly Circadian Rhythms

New research has shown that the monarch butterfly uses a light-sensitive cryptochrome protein to regulate its internal circadian rhythm, and this protein is also linked to its navigational ability, suggesting that "part of the remarkable navigational ability of the butterfly relies on its ability to integrate temporal information from the clock with spatial information from its visual system. This allows the monarch to correct its course as light shifts across the sky over the course of the day."