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During hibernation, Arctic ground squirrels can lower body temperature close to freezing. Even the brain keeps functioning, with periodic warm-ups that reset the system.
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Kısaca
During hibernation, Arctic ground squirrels can lower body temperature close to freezing. Even the brain keeps functioning, with periodic warm-ups that reset the system.
Lichens live on bare rock and slowly dissolve minerals. Over time, this can prepare a surface for soil, making lichens nature’s quiet pioneer builders.
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.
Sea otters may hold hands while sleeping to avoid drifting apart. They also wrap in kelp like an anchor, forming a living tether to stay in place.
Some elephant calls are so low in frequency they are hard for humans to hear. These infrasound rumbles can travel for kilometers across open land, letting herds read distant messages.
Hummingbirds burn extreme energy by day, then may enter a cooling mode called torpor at night. Heart rate and temperature drop, and they ramp back up with morning light.
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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