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Kangaroo rats can survive desert heat with little to no free water. They make metabolic water from seeds and reduce loss with highly concentrated urine and water-saving nasal passages.
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Kısaca
Kangaroo rats can survive desert heat with little to no free water. They make metabolic water from seeds and reduce loss with highly concentrated urine and water-saving nasal passages.
Some Arctic plants keep the inside of a flower warmer than the air, attracting insects. A tiny greenhouse effect becomes a trick that helps reproduction in the cold.
Beta-carotene in shrimp colors their feathers. That"s why zoo flamingos often look pale.
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.
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.
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.
Arctic foxes can wear brownish fur in summer and bright white in winter. The shift preserves camouflage for both hunting and hiding, as nature flips the color palette.
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