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Aug 21, 2021 6 tweets 3 min read Read on X
This is a dead leaf

Can you see that vibrant green defiant patch? That part is kept alive by the larvae of leaf mining insects, and even though its long fallen off the tree it’s still photosynthesising.

How and why?

📸images Mike Shurmer
Source cutt.ly/kQ8RqrX 1/ ImageImage
Leaf-mining insect lay eggs on leaves

After hatching, the larvae tunnel through into the leaf protected from predation and the plants own defences and eat leaf tissue creating little visible tunnel patterns 2/
these insects pass from generation to generation a certain bacteria that manipulates the leafs own signalling chemicals – hormones called cytokinins. These usually do many tasks preventing a leaf dying 3/
And since their whole life depends on eating leaf tissue... some plants “pretend to be ill” to avoid leaf mining insects depositing their eggs

One such plant is Caladium steudneriifolium whose leaves already “ appear”infested with larvae 4/

📸 image cutt.ly/fQ8T13y Image
Just to summarise leaf mining insects can be moths sawflies etc. Their larvae need the protection and sustenance of the leaf, and by keeping bits of dead leaves alive in autumn, they increase their window of reproduction into seasons where food is scarce 5/
The images In tweet one are by Mike Shurmer @mike_shurmer

The full video link for tweet 2 is here and is really worth watching cutt.ly/jQ8bXCF

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More from @gunsnrosesgirl3

Jul 10
Nature likes repeating patterns, here are some creatures that share a huge resemblance

Purple-crowned Fairy-wren and Protaetia mirifica mirifica beetle. Both species display an iridescent purple crown-nearly indistinguishable at a glance.

1/🧵 Image
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Jul 22, 2023
The little bird that raised a cuckoo as it’s own offspring

the young cuckoo has grown bigger, than Its host parents, but they dutifully continues to feed and care for it
birds have evolved signature markings on their eggs to distinguish their own from those of any brood parasite yet cuckoos have an egg mimicking ability, and can mimic the most sophisticated markers cam.ac.uk/research/news/…
How is it possible for a cuckoo chick to hatch first just in time to evict all the other eggs to ensure it’s own survival?

Well the cuckoo eggs are internally incubated longer by it’s own parent for this advance hatching

sciencedaily.com/releases/2010/…
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Jun 23, 2023
3000 years ago, in what is now Iran, a type of underground aqueduct called a qanat was engineered to transport water over long distances to farms and villages that couldn’t exist without it in the hot dry climates

The holes supplied oxygen to workers who dug the aqueduct by hand… https://t.co/ReGzWGf6TAtwitter.com/i/web/status/1…
The reason qanats do not appear as straight lines is primarily due to the need to follow the natural contours of the land. The process of creating a qanat involved identifying a water source, usually an underground aquifer, and then digging a tunnel from a lower elevation to tap… twitter.com/i/web/status/1…
Read 4 tweets
Nov 19, 2022
Mimosa pudica folds its leaves in response to touch, this may avoid predation by herbivorous insects

Watch the signals to close its leaves travel long distances rapidly across the plant when a grasshopper chews a leaf 1/🧵
2/🧵Many plants have responses to protect themselves

M. pudica has a Ca2+/electrical signal-induced rapid defense response, a motion response that actively repels predators

This speed at which calcium signals travel protect the plants from insects

nature.com/articles/s4146…
3/🧵 here’s what happens the moment a caterpillar eats a mustard plant

You can see bursts of light moving across communicating ‘danger signals’

These signals may activate the plant’s defense mechanisms, or turn on pathways to healing damaged tissue
Read 4 tweets
Oct 24, 2022
Humans apparently have stripes that are invisible to our eyes but your cat possibly can see them

They are Blaschko’s lines, relics of growth as a foetus, swirls representing cell division and the trails cells took

Some conditions make them visible 1/🧵
📸BC Medical Genetics
2/🧵

These can only be seen with the help of UV light and as many animals see in ultraviolet, there’s no knowing how we appear to them

Source of image bmcmedgenet.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.11…

More reading en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blaschko%…
What you are looking at in the first picture is a skin condition explained in the link, following the path of these lines
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Oct 24, 2022
In this time-lapse video by Mitsuru Yasui
You can see many cats following a sun beam.

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Source of video
3/ I saw a few questions about they need to regulate body temp, theirs is a little bit higher than ours
between 100.4°F and 102.50F,
compared to ours at 98.6° F, body heat is lost as metabolic process slow down in sleep so they can generate their heat using energy or use the sun
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