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Some shark species grow astonishingly slowly and live for a very long time. In cold waters, slower metabolism can stretch their ‘calendar’ in remarkable ways.
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Kısaca
Some shark species grow astonishingly slowly and live for a very long time. In cold waters, slower metabolism can stretch their ‘calendar’ in remarkable ways.
Octopus arms don’t just grab—they can chemically sense and ‘taste.’ And their nerves are strong in the arms, so part of decision-making happens locally, not only in the head.
A Venus flytrap does not snap shut on a single touch. It often requires two touches within a short window, avoiding wasted energy on false alarms like raindrops.
With pea-sized brains, they can perform facial recognition. Scientists are still studying how.
In seahorses, males carry the eggs: the female deposits them into the male’s pouch and ‘pregnancy’ begins there. This flip reshapes mate choice and parental care.
When threatened, bombardier beetles eject a chemical mix in sudden bursts. The reaction heats up and the spray is pulsed, like a tiny animal carrying a miniature defense cannon.
Mountain pikas collect flowers and grasses, drying them into “hay piles” before winter. Even under snow, these caches act like a pantry: summer effort becomes winter survival.
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