Kısaca
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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Kısaca
In some turtles, hatchling sex depends on incubation temperature. Even within one nest, a few degrees can produce a very different next generation.
When whales feed and surface, their nutrient-rich waste moves elements like iron and nitrogen upward. This “whale pump” can boost plankton and ripple through the whole food web.
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.
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.
Beta-carotene in shrimp colors their feathers. That"s why zoo flamingos often look pale.
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.
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