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Sea turtles that cross vast oceans and return to the same beach use cues from Earth’s magnetic field. It’s like carrying an invisible compass and map at once.
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Kısaca
Sea turtles that cross vast oceans and return to the same beach use cues from Earth’s magnetic field. It’s like carrying an invisible compass and map at once.
So similar that forensic experts can have trouble telling them apart. Not common ancestry - parallel evolution.
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.
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.
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.
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.
Under the right conditions, some bamboo species shoot upward at astonishing speed. The growth comes from rapidly extending segments, making the plant look like it is skipping time.
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