they're holding hands 🥹
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noise dept.

Kaledo Art

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oozey mess

blake kathryn

titsay

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sheepfilms
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Not today Justin

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Keni
Monterey Bay Aquarium
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Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
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Show & Tell
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@birbknees
they're holding hands 🥹
seconds later
a few favorites from the many altered key pendants i'll have with me this weekend at Yet Another Queer Pop-Up Market. i've been collecting the keys for years & it's very exciting to finally be doing what i want with them! the metal decorative elements on some of the keys come from a box of castoffs from a 1910s costume jewelry factory (lucky find 15+ years ago that i've been slowly working through). finding the right size quartz points for the hollow clock key tips is oddly satisfying!
don't worry, the human teeth are modern acrylic resin from a dental supply shop. i attach them to the key shafts (that have no bits of their own, they're sewing cabinet keys) with an epoxy sculpting material that i color-match to each key with metallic pigments. figuring out how to sculpt faux-metal is honestly changing the sculpture game for me.
Southern African Wildcat | Eugene Tulleken
decision paralysis demon
Big!!! Steppy!!!
Taking her job very seriously
Shell-Nesting Mason Bees: these bees build their nests in empty snail shells, using crushed leaves and soil to form the inner brood chambers and then sealing the entrance with debris
Bees of the family Megachilidae typically build their nests in the gaps and crevices in tree stumps, rocks, plant stems, and wooden structures, but there are a few species that prefer to nest in discarded snail shells. Most of these shell-nesting bees are found in Europe, North Africa, and the Near East; a few can also be found in North America, South Africa, and Japan.
Above: just some cozy little mason bees
These are solitary bees, meaning that they don't form colonies or live together in hives, so each female builds her own individual nest. The nest is constructed as a series of brood cells, and each cell contains a single egg with enough pollen and nectar to sustain the larva until it reaches adulthood.
Shell-nesting mason bees are known to exist in at least five different genera, including Osmia, Hoplitis, Rhodanthidium, Wainia, and Protosmia.
Above: Osmia spinulosa and Rhodanthidium septemdentatum, both of which build their nests in snail shells
When the female is ready to nest, she carefully selects a shell and then drags it into a shaded or well-hidden spot. Moving the shell is no easy feat, but she clings to it with her hind legs and pulls herself along by grabbing objects with her mandibles. A single bee may travel like that for several meters before finally settling on the right spot to prepare her nest.
Above: a mason bee dragging her shell into position
This article describes how the nest is then constructed:
The bee begins to build its nest, mainly within the “whorl” or spire of the shell. A typical nest consists of a few chambers (about two or four in number, depending on the size of the shell) known as cells, the walls of which consist of masticated leaf pulp known as leaf mastic. When fresh, the colour of this material is bright green, but with time, it assumes a brownish or black colour. Each cell is provisioned with a mixture of pollen and nectar, an egg is laid on this, and the cell sealed with further leaf mastic.
Above: two nests with their internal structures partially exposed, revealing the brood cells, larvae, pollen/nectar, and several layers of debris
The layout of the nest varies depending on the species, with some bees producing brood cells that are arranged into rows, while others create clustered or overlapping cells.
Above: the nest of a gold-fringed mason bee
The female must make dozens of trips just to gather the provisions for a single brood cell, and completing the entire nest can take days.
Once the brood chambers have been constructed and provisioned, the entrance to the shell is "bricked up" with several layers of plant pulp, soil, pebbles, and shell fragments. In some cases, the female will also apply patches of plant pulp to the outer surface of the shell as a way to provide camouflage.
Above: mason bees sealing their nests with plant pulp
The completed nest is then carefully maneuvered so that the entrance faces the ground. Some females will conceal the nest beneath a pile of twigs, pine needles, and plant stems, weaving moss and blades of grass throughout the pile. All of the debris is carefully selected, positioned, and then "glued" together with saliva, forming a tangled, tent-like structure over the nest.
Above: Osmia bicolor, commonly known as the red-tailed mason bee. constructing a protective thatch over her nest
In other cases, the female will conceal the nest by creating a small hole in the sand and then dragging the shell into it, ensuring that the nest is partially buried.
Above: Osmia aurulenta and Osmia rufohirta
This is just one of the many peculiar nesting habits that can be found among solitary bees. Several other examples have been featured in my previous posts, which describe the nest-building strategies of woolcarder bees, resin-pot bees, and a ground-dwelling species known as Osmia avosetta.
Above: the fully-constructed nest of a shell-nesting mason bee
Sources & More Info:
Bulletin of the Amateur Entomologists' Society: Shell-Nesting Bees
The Little Book of Bees: Snail-Nesting Mason Bees
University of Hradec Králové: Bees Nesting in Empty Gastropod Shells
Bees of the World: Snail Shells
The Wildlife Trusts: Red-Tailed Mason Bees
Insects: Nesting Preferences of Osmia orientalis
Journal of Hymenoptera Research: Comparative Biology of Four Rhodanthidium Species that Nest in Snail Shells
Journal of Hymenoptera Research: Biology of Palaearctic Wainia Bees of the Subgenus Caposmia
Cambridge University Press: The Native Shell-Nesting Bee Osmia conjuncta
Wired: Adorable Bees that Live Inside Snail Shells
I am not immune to the thing where, right before a life-or-death battle, Character A steps close to Character B, touches them - maybe for the first time, or more intimately than they've ever touched - and murmurs, "I'm sorry" - and then SHOVES Character B into the panic room/lifeboat/escape pod and out of harm's way, before heading out to face the danger alone.
Extra points when Character B knows Character A too well to waste their breath yelling after them, and instead grits their teeth and starts trying to brute-force their way OUT of safety.
Extra EXTRA points for Character B managing to get free offscreen and come back for the big rescue just in time.
Movement nudge! Working toward aging well.
X
pom pom crabs are some of the most unethical animals in the ocean
this man is a serial abuser
His pom poms are two sessile invertebrates he holds in his hands and starves so he can punch stuff with anemones who are so desperate to eat that they’ll use maximum sting on anything that gets close to him. When they starve to death he just finds more
ACTUALLY, IT IS WORSE
The crabs will force the anemones to clone themselves if one dies OR steal others’ anemones if both die
They haven’t found these anemones in their free-living form, so, as far as we know, this anemone species is these crabs’ slave species—it’s only known in association with pom pom crabs
Cool paper on this: Schnytzer, Y., Giman, Y., Karplus, I., & Achituv, Y. (2017). Boxer crabs induce asexual reproduction of their associated sea anemones by splitting and intraspecific theft. PeerJ, 5, e2954. https://doi.org/10.7717/peerj.2954
Crabs of the genus Lybia have the remarkable habit of holding a sea anemone in each of their claws. This partnership appears to be obligate,
So if I understand this right, "slave species" is a biology term only used for this ONE SPECIFIC CREATURE OF ALL THE COUNTLESS LIVING ORGANISMS ON THIS ENTIRE PLANET?!
Oh, the slave species thing is outdated information from the original study in the 90’s. To be fair, that study is still very very respected, it was just wrong about this specific thing.
Their anemones aren’t a unique species, they are only visually distinct because the crab farms them in a very specific way - making a fragment of a larger hawaiian anemone, or finding a newly spawned one. When they carry it around, they force the anemone to adapt to an entire new lifestyle. The crab’s nocturnal behavior slowly kills the anemone’s photosynthetic symbionts, from which it gets its color. After that, the crab can control how much food the anemone actually gets by using it to mop up food off the sea floor, and take excess out of its mouth. Since it doesnt have to reach for sunlight, or reach to catch food, this encourages dense, but short tentacles.
The shortcoming of this study was just that its very hard to get the anemone away from the crab without killing both, and its equally hard to get an anemone to bounce back from this state.
Due to their introduction into home aquaria, we now know any anemone they take will end up in this state, (bubble tips, aipistasia, haitian anemones, the list goes on) and we also know they are not bound to carrying anemone’s specifically. They’ve been seen collecting zoanthids, palythoa, and euphyllia (though euphyllians usually don’t survive).
Making exercises more accessible to the disabled? Fuck yeah!
I love otter
well?
thppthpthpthpth
mlem mlem mlem mlem
plp|p|p|p|p|p|p|p
blehhhhlelelelhhhh
by Lena Polishko
Jurassic park
so called "free thinkers" when there's a bug on the ceiling