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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.
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Kısaca
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 firefly swarms light up like a metronome, flashing together in the dark. Thousands of tiny lamps keeping one rhythm is a rare natural choreography.
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.
When tardigrades lose water, they can shrink into a pause state. Metabolism slows dramatically, and when water returns they can revive as if a switch was flipped.
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.
Some pines keep cones sealed for years and open them with high heat. After a fire, seeds fall onto ash-enriched soil where competition is lower and chances rise.
Emperor penguins find the same mate for years. They recognize each other by voice among thousands.
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