Kısaca
During drought, some trees can transfer carbon to neighbors via root contacts and shared soil partnerships. A forest can behave less like individuals and more like a network.
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Kısaca
During drought, some trees can transfer carbon to neighbors via root contacts and shared soil partnerships. A forest can behave less like individuals and more like a network.
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.
On some reefs, millions of corals release egg-sperm bundles on the same night. Cues like moon cycles and water temperature set the timing, and the sea fills like drifting snow.
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.
Beavers slow water by building dams and create new wetlands. That means habitat for birds, frogs, and countless species; a single dam can reshape the landscape.
Bioluminescent fungi can glow green in the dark, sometimes keeping a steady rhythm through the night. The glow may lure insects that help carry spores farther.
Under the soil, fungal threads can connect roots into networks. These links influence water and nutrient flow, and shaded seedlings may receive support from neighboring trees.
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