Kısaca
Bees don’t rely only on color and scent—they can sense electric field differences too. A flower’s charge can hint whether it was recently visited, shaping a bee’s route.
Dil değiştiriliyor...
Lütfen bekleyin
Kısaca
Bees don’t rely only on color and scent—they can sense electric field differences too. A flower’s charge can hint whether it was recently visited, shaping a bee’s route.
Some butterfly colors are not paint-like pigments but light shaped by microscopic layers. That is why the color shifts with viewing angle; the wing acts like a natural prism.
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.
Shark skin is not smooth; it is covered in tiny tooth-like denticles. This structure can shape water flow and reduce drag, inspiring surface design in engineering.
Mangroves live in seawater, but too much salt would kill them. Some species excrete extra salt through their leaves, leaving tiny crystal-like traces on the surface.
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.
Her gün yeni bilgiler, ilginç gerçekler ve faydalı içeriklerle bilgi dağarcığını genişlet!
Tüm Bilgileri Keşfet