Loki episode 5 bird things screencaps.
What is this bird thingy??

Origami Around
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@compendiaadhitiensis
Loki episode 5 bird things screencaps.
What is this bird thingy??
what's the dumbest piece of plant anatomy. where do you look at a plant and you're like "why did evolution do this instead of literally anything else"
hmmâŚthis is a tough one because there arenât many plant evolutionary traits i think are flat out stupid? like theres at least like one a week that makes me shit bricks, but id say with 99% of plant stuff i can at least see how it got to the conclusion of making a certain structure, and most of the time its something way smarter than i would have come up with if i was like, god or something.Â
the closest i can think of would be something from back before plants figured out literally anythingâŚ.i know ive talked about this a few months ago, but i really canât get over a variety of extinct plants. currently my favorite from the dawn of plants on land is Aglaophyton major, a plant that was around 410 million years ago and was in the stage where plant anatomy was shifting from a primitive upright stem sprouting from a thallus (hornwort style) to a stem creeping along the ground.
this is literally so embarrassing. humans finding fossils of this is analogous to mankind as a whole accidentally walking in on someone in the public restroom of life.Â
we dont know how many plant species weâll never get to see from this time period, but the current idea is that there were hundreds to thousands of different âtriesâ to get plant life on earth right, all mutations and species that are 100% lost to the sands of time; only the more successful ones are the ones that got fossilized and, as a result, dug up and studied more often. now, given that, can you imagine the chances of Land Plant v. 2.5 (Noodle Update) getting fossilized and dug up by scientists 410 million years later? like donât get me wrong, thereâs no doubt that getting from âstraight primitive stemâ to âcreeping, more adaptable stemâ was necessary for life as we know it today, but there are probably hundreds of other, less embarrassing stages/attempts of plant evolution that werenât this hilarious that would have at least afforded the decency of not showing a far ancestor of plant life on land engaging in spaghetti time. its so funny. i just cant believe it
So I found this coconut on the beach in Costa Rica and when I opened it THIS was inside. I think itâs the endosperm (or whatever you call the thing that develops into the tree). The coconut water itself wasnât as sweet as usual (probably because it had sprouted), but the little sprout boi tasted sweet on one end and salty on the other. (submitted by @jewishpangolin)
âââââ-
dude i have no idea how to tell you this but i have no idea what this is. i showed this to my plant anatomy professor and one of the mods at @thebashfulbotanist after class and none of us could figure out what this is. it doesnât look like a fungus, the embryos in coconuts are tiny and donât look like this, and the first thing a coconut sprouts is a root, not the stem, and it grows outward. there should be nothing normal like this growing in there. my plant anatomy teacher has never seen anything like this and has offered to forward this image to a palm researcher she knows to see if he has. i repeat, we have no idea what you ate but it was not a normal sprout boi. please stand by
This is perfectly normal! Hereâs a diagram:
And a model:
The submitter is fine! They just got it at an earlier stage of development. The haustorium is very much edible, and is typically sold as sprouted coconut.
Metus conglomeratus
This odd member of the cladoniaceae family is native to the southern hemisphere and has been found thus far in Australia and South America. Sadly, not much is known about it, as with many lichens not common native to the northern hemisphere, but sheâs beautiful and deserves appreciation. I would love to survey and study this lesser-known species, but funding. So support your local lichenologists, and continue to go out and find the good lichens for us!Â
images: source | source
gliophorus psittacinus
drained of blood, the heart is white
No, that is NOT what this is. Youâve taken an amazing medical invention, a total game changer, and made up some stupid, faux-deep sentence fragment for it that is a complete falsehood. You should be embarrassed and ashamed, honestly.
This is a ghost heart. What theyâve done is taken a pig heart and stripped it down to, basically, a cell framework that they can use to BUILD A NEW HEART UPON. You could inject stem cells into this framework so that a newly formed personalized heart can be transplanted into a donor with a significantly reduced chance of rejection. FUCKING AMAZING. Itâs not been done with human tissue yet, but the promise this given to people who need hearts - or kidneys or livers or whatever - is beautiful. Science is beautiful.
And itâs IMPERATIVE to mention that a woman, Doris Taylor, at the Texas Heart Institute developed this. And she started with a rat heart and worked up to he bigger, more complex (and more human) pig heart. What a total bad ass.
So look, quit making shit up, learn to do a reverse image search on stuff you find on the internet, and STOP ERASING WOMEN IN SCIENCE.
Reblogging for:
The corrected information
WOMEN IN SCIENCE
The fact that rejection rate would be LESS which is VITAL
Reblog for science communication
To be honest ghost heart sounds way more badass then a drained heart
Nepenthes villosa teeth never get old! (at Colorado Springs, Colorado) https://www.instagram.com/p/CGbtzdxFnY0/?igshid=jduk3rn2zd8n
The world's most indestructible critter just got even more indestructible.
The worldâs most indestructible critter just got even more indestructible.
Not content with its existing abilities to survive extreme temperatures, pressures, and the airless vacuum of space, the humble yet seemingly unkillable tardigrade looks to have unlocked another amazing superpower: the ability to withstand lethal doses of ultraviolet (UV) radiation.
While we have observed tardigrades surviving radiation before now thanks to a âdamage suppressionâ protein called Dsup, this UV resistance trick is a newly identified feather in the tardigradeâs cap, operating via a different kind of biological mechanism.
Continue Reading.
Plant of the Day
Sunday 8 October 2017
At the Royal Botanic Gardens Kew, London, the carnivorous plant Drosophyllum lusitanicum (Portuguese sundew, dewy pine, slobbering pine) was catching the sunlight as well as insects. This species is native to areas of Portugal, Spain, and Morocco and prefers a Mediterranean climate with mild wet winters and hot dry summers. Â
Jill Raggett
Sarracenia âBug Batâ photographed with UVIVF.
Drosera glabripes in situ, Bettyâs Bay Western Cape. #Drosera #č čč #SouthAfricanPlant #CarnivorousPlant
Adhitâs Plant Diary 04 - Newcomer to my room, a pot of Drosera sesiliflora #drosera #plant #carnivorousplants #sundew (at Cinere Kota Depok) https://www.instagram.com/p/CEgZzJMMEHq/?igshid=nr4jyzu3cxm7
Adhitâs Plant Diary 03 - Adhit (ceritanya) sebagai danlap osjur HIMABIO Nymphaea ITB, âWahai teratai muda! Kalian datang ke sini, dengan segala perjuangan orang tua kalian!! Mereka memberikan semua agar kalian tumbuh (Gambar 1 - Buah teratai yang belok demi bijinya bisa menyebar). Kalian datang dengan ledakan atas dukungan orang tua kalian! (Gambar 2 - Buah yang meledak, menunjukkan bijinya, lihat bentuknya, itu pecah alami; bentuk persebaran jaringannya sangat acak). Sekarang kalian di sini, kami menanti perjuanganmu dan kontribusimu di sini (Gambar 3 - Biji teratai)â (at Cinere Kota Depok) https://www.instagram.com/p/CEYSc0MMqNG/?igshid=18bbcul0wrq4f
The creation of Vileploom, 2020, re-colorized (at Kebun Raya Bogor) https://www.instagram.com/p/CDLxt1mM5wB/?igshid=hujysx92wqdr
Awesome! Itâs wonderful to see this little guy in the cover!! ⢠Cover taken by me, straight from @dwikimahendraputraâs camera, submitted by @parvezeldudo! #zoology #journal (at Jakarta, Indonesia) https://www.instagram.com/p/CCTslFUshRr/?igshid=1g32codapx6q3
is it possible that plants have consciousness?
this is actually a small sub branch of botany thats been growing and gaining some recognition in the past 5 years or so called plant cognition! weâve been thinking about if plants can possibly be intelligent to any degree for centuries, but the main paper that started up this huge discussion in the modern era was one called Experience Teaches Plants to Learn Faster and Forget Slower in Environments Where It Matters by Monica Gagliano, a plant researcher in Australia who specializes in it. because the results indicated that plants were possible of learning and retaining information in a kind of memory in response to environmental changes, it received a lot of backlash and denial- generally in science, that kind of intelligent reaction to an organismâs environment is a good indicator of cognitive behavior in the organism. it got rejected by 10 different journals before being published in 2014.Â
the experiment worked like this. iâve talked before about mimosa pudica, a tropical plant that curls its leaves back when touched (they go back to normal in a few minutes):
this is to help deter predators among other things. but in this experiment, Gagliano used it as an indicator of stimulus and to test cognitive function. Itâs well known that pudica has a rudimentary nervous system that can even be temporarily inhibited using anesthetics (just like ours can!). she hooked up a ton of these plants in pots to identical rail systems that allowed them to be lightly dropped in an identical way, juuuuust heavy enough to trigger the stimulus so all the leaves drop down when they hit the bottom (a piece of foam so they wouldnât actually hurt the plants). every time the plants would be dropped, they would close up.Â
but after the plants were dropped about 60 times each, they stopped responding to the drop.Â
they remembered that no harm was coming from this action and decided that it was against their best interests to keep expending energy closing their leaves. they 200% learned to stop.Â
she decided to test it further. she put some of the plants in a shaker and let them receive a more jarring response; the plants closed up as usual. then, she put them back in the droppers and dropped them again. they didnât close up. they had remembered that response. this dispels the obvious rebuttal to this experiment of the plants just being tired; they still closed up when stimulated differently.
they just chose not to close up when they hit a stimulus they remembered.Â
it turns out that not only could they remember to keep their leaves open when dropped on the apparatus, but they remembered after 28 days when she kept testing it!! apparently by the end of the experiment, all the plants had decided to keep their leaves open when dropped!!!!
how do they do this?? we literally dont know. they have no central brain, only a basic nervous system. can other plants do this???Â
well, adding onto that, venus fly traps can count! like. they have three hairs inside their traps, and all three must be touched within 20 seconds for the trap to close. once closed, those three trigger hairs must continue to be stimulated by thrashing prey, or the trap will reopen.Â
so yeah like. basically âare they sentientâ: apparently to an extent???? we dont know exactly why or how but they are??? maybe???? sort of????? at least some of them are?? but they dont have a brain so everyones like????????????????????? maybe its through a signaling network????????????????? but like how would that even work?????????
plant consciousness is still new enough to be dismissed as crazy by a lot of biologists but like. the evidence is there. we donât know a whole lot and its clearly a radically different kind of intelligence than we know in animals, but itâs there and we 200% dont know how it works yet or even the full extent of how plants use this intelligence (for example: does a redwood have the same intelligence as a venus fly trap?? how does it learn things and use that knowledge???)Â
national geographic wrote an awesome article visualizing the experiment here if you want to read more!
Study of an alien on Earth: Rhizanthes lowii (Rafflesiaceae; local name: Ulur-ulur). Found this on an online store (from Kalimantan) and the flower bud (despite people call it âthe fruitâ) was sold in dry state as folk medicine. I decided to buy it to analyze it⌠and taste it (??) #rhizanthes #ulurulur (at Jakarta, Indonesia) https://www.instagram.com/p/CCFOpOrBsdQ/?igshid=e6o9jvivi6zh