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December 21, 2006: Moth drinks tears
http://cellar.org/2006/mothdrinkstears.jpg
New Scientist via Mental Floss via Neatorama is the tracking for this very strange and frightening item. Quote:
http://cellar.org/2006/mothdrinkstears2.jpg |
too many moths to feed...
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Does Visine get the moth out?
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I accept evolution as the most likely explanation for how we all are what we are, but DAMN. That's just amazing. You gotta wonder what steps were taken over the eons for the moths to form a nasty barbed proboscis like this.
I mean, the moths had to be smart enough in the first place to sneak up on sleeping animals and suck their tears, which I suppose isn't such a leap. We've all seen flies buzzing around the eyes of cattle or starving Ethiopian kids. These moths just do it at night. But then they had to evolve barbs at some time. Amazing. Just amazing.:eek: |
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I also wonder how this is for the birds. A good thing? Does it benefit them somehow? Or does it depelete them of needed tears that keep their eyes moistenened? |
Several thoughts:
1) I'll never complain about eye boogers again. 2) Somebody missed out on a chance to have made Mothra a lot more interesting when he battled Godzilla. 3) Literary: "He was drawn to her willowy beauty, as a moth with a barbed proboscis is drawn to the eye of a teary magpie robin at rest." |
Thank you for the sig.
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Glatt, I'm such a layman on this stuff. But thinking about it, I wonder if insects are specialists because their lifespan is so short that they evolve "quickly". Instead of getting more complicated to be able to adapt to changing conditions, they're genetically simple and just wind up evolving to consume whatever is available.
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(els is especially talented, no?) |
seriously well wired for words
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Did someone switch the Earth with an bizarre alien planet when we weren't looking?
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