Kısaca
In some years, jellyfish numbers surge and coasts fill with gelatinous swarms. When warmth, food, and low predation align, a rapid “bloom” can be triggered.
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Kısaca
In some years, jellyfish numbers surge and coasts fill with gelatinous swarms. When warmth, food, and low predation align, a rapid “bloom” can be triggered.
When a tree is harmed, neighbors can switch to defense faster. Signals moving through roots and fungal networks act like an underground messaging line.
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.
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.
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.
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.
In some turtles, hatchling sex depends on incubation temperature. Even within one nest, a few degrees can produce a very different next generation.
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