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zycr22
@zycr22
60
I am curious about how things work and I like writing about what I learn. I have a series of ongoing posts about ants. Other animals appear from time to time.
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United States
Created
September 19, 2017
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zycr22
steemstem
2017-11-30 08:05
Do dolphins drown in water?
I have been meaning to write about the sleeping habits of dolphins and frigatebirds since my last post on the sleeping habits of mallard ducks. The original plan was to talk about the sleeping habits of
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zycr22
science
2017-11-24 06:52
The art of staying half-awake: unihemispheric sleep keeps ducks (and humans) safe
Imagine being able to fall asleep with half of your brain while the other half still functions. Wouldn’t that be interesting! Several animals seem to be capable of doing this, and even human beings have
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zycr22
science
2017-11-17 04:38
The dreams of an ant, or Why everybody needs to sleep well
I have not posted anything for a whole week, mostly because I have had to meet some deadlines at work. Apart from a pause from all social media and writing, deadlines have one other important effect on
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zycr22
science
2017-11-10 03:48
Agriculture in the ant colonies: a story of evolution, mutualism, and antibiotics
I have been writing about bats for a while and I had also stopped reading the book on ants for a week. I picked it up again this week and started reading the Economics of Ant Society, and came across a
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zycr22
science
2017-11-09 00:33
On the bats dying around us
In my last post on bats, I talked about how these animals can spread dangerous diseases among humans. This post is also about diseases, but the victims in this story are the bats. Millions of bats. Meet
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zycr22
science
2017-11-03 08:39
Bats, diseases, and the Ebola epidemic
After discussing in length about how wonderful bats are for our agriculture and for our forests, in my last post, I hinted at the fact that they also carry diseases that are sometimes lethal when transmitted
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zycr22
steemstem
2017-10-31 20:48
Appreciating Bats Part 2: Insect-eating bats save our crops
In my last post on bats, I talked about how these animals are useful pollinators in our agricultural fields as well as in the wild. In this post, I am going to talk about how insectivorous bats play a
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zycr22
steemstem
2017-10-29 07:58
Appreciating Bats Part 1: Cross pollination and tequila plants
Fair warning: This is not a post about ants. I have been reading quite a few articles about bats recently, mostly because it is the last week of October, and is thus the Bat Appreciation Week. So I thought
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zycr22
steemstem
2017-10-27 07:33
Con artists among the ants: deceptive beetles and convergent evolution
Getting the Greek straight This post is about an intriguing phenomenon called myrmecophily, which, if you go into the Greek roots of the word, means “ant-love.” Now that can be a misleading piece of
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zycr22
steemstem
2017-10-23 07:01
Not so busy ants and the Pareto principle
This weekend, I went through the chapter called Ants at work: maids, nannies, laborers, soldiers in the book by Jae Choe that I have mentioned in previous posts. Here, the text explains how ants work as
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zycr22
steemstem
2017-10-19 06:32
Ant eyes, ultraviolet vision, and death spirals
The question for this post is this: How do ants see things? “With their eyes, of course,” would be an obvious answer to that question. But do ants have eyes? And if they do, are those eyes anything like
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zycr22
science
2017-10-16 23:55
Ants and the sun: knowing where to go
Let us begin by saying that the world is a big scary place and it is difficult to know where to go next. Still, let us assume for now that you have the knowledge of where to go. The great problem that
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zycr22
science
2017-10-15 10:26
Ant sounds (and dances), robotic bees, and a few words about the Encarta Encyclopedia
First, the waggle dance of bees In my last post on ant communication, I talked about how ants rely on the sense of touch and on chemical cues for much of their communication. And in the end I mentioned
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zycr22
science
2017-10-11 20:38
How to talk to ants: touches and smells
In my last post about ants, I mentioned the book by Jae Choe that I have started reading and how that book describes the economics, culture, and politics of ant society, in that specific order. I decided
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zycr22
science
2017-10-08 10:41
Antsy thoughts: the curious world of ants
Yes, the word antsy does come from the word ant. The dictionaries will tell you that it means restless, and that it comes from the expression have ants in one's pants. I am sure having ants in the pants
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zycr22
writingfeather
2017-10-06 16:19
Poem -- A tired lover explains his darkness and his light
I saw a dead squirrel on my way to work today. Its open eyes reminded me of the emptiness within. The world was suddenly a fragile dream where death walked with me and it made me think of you. It made
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zycr22
fiction
2017-10-05 01:51
Short Story -- The Picture on the Wall
Old Alinani Akira lived alone in his mansion in the mountains on a little glowing planet in the cluster of galaxies known as Abell 2065 and thought about the meaning of existence. There were only a few
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zycr22
marveloustales
2017-10-02 11:29
Marvelous Tales #16 - The Dancing Partner
How can we know the dancer from the dance? --William Butler Yeats If you have any interest in dances, you must surely have heard about Madam Nina who used to be a ballerina extraordinaire, and you must
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zycr22
life
2017-10-01 07:37
On noticing things
And we all are too busy (or too happy) to notice things. That is a Chekhov thought again. Do you notice whether it is summer or winter? When you do not, is it because you are happy? Or is it the overwhelming
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zycr22
inspiration
2017-10-01 07:18
On everyday struggles
"Any idiot can face a crisis," says Anton Chekhov, "It's day to day living that wears you out." Not having a crisis to deal with right now, and not being particularly worn out either,
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