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Great White Shark Great white shark with its mouth open.

Stephen Frink / Corbis

  • Science & Nature

Wild Things:
Life as We Know It

Great white sharks, endangered frogs and more

  • By T.A. Frail, Megan Gambino, Anika Gupta, Laura Helmuth and Jesse Rhodes
  • Smithsonian magazine, October 2008

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    Photo Gallery

    map of threatened amphibian species

    Wild Things:
    Life as We Know It

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    Amanda Bensen, Anika Gupta, T.A. Frail, Abigail Tucker and Sarah Zielinski

    Life As We Know It

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    It's not Easy Being Green (or Orange)
    Of 6,300 known amphibian species, one-third are vulnerable, endangered or critically endangered, say scientists in California. Tropical countries have the most amphibians and the most threatened species. The culprits? Habitat loss, global warming and the fungal disease chytridiomycosis.

    A Change in Strategy
    Milkweed plants defend themselves against caterpillars and other predators with toxins, spiky leaves and sticky latex. But a Cornell and Portland State University study of 38 milkweed species shows that the newest ones rely more on a different survival strategy: they regrow quickly after being damaged. Apparently resistance to predators is (relatively) futile.

    The Baddest Bite
    Australian-led researchers have found that a great white shark clamps down with a force of 2 tons. The most powerful bite known of any animal alive, that's 3 times the force of a lion and 23 times that of a person—though just a nip compared with the 12- to 20-ton bite of the extinct megalodon shark.

    Long-Tailed Tipplers
    Pen-tailed tree shrews and at least six other small mammals in Malaysia imbibe naturally fermented bertam palm flower nectar, which is up to 3.8 percent alcohol, like beer. The animals are the only ones (aside from humans) known to drink regularly, say the researchers, from Germany and elsewhere, who saw no "motor incoordination or other behavioral signs of inebriation." The animals appear to have a high alcohol tolerance.

    Observed
    Name: The Atlantic molly, Poecilia mexicana
    In Private: Males prefer to mate with large females. They also often pursue females that they have seen other males pursue.
    In Public: When rival males are present, a male disguises his choice of mate by feigning interest in a different female.
    In the Lab: Males went so far as to feign interest in a female of a different species, according to a new study by researchers from the University of Potsdam, Germany, and the University of Oklahoma. This bait-and-switch routine, the scientists say, may represent an attempt to direct rivals' attention away from the choicest female and avoid competing with other males.



    Additional Sources

    "Are we in the midst of the sixth mass extinction? A view from the world of amphibians," David B. Wake and Vance T. Vredenburg, PNAS, August 12, 2008

    "Phylogenetic escalation and decline of plant defense strategies," Anurag A. Agrawal and Mark Fishbein, PNAS, July 22, 2008

    "Male Fish Deceive Competitors about Mating Preferences," Martin Plath et al., Current Biology, August 5, 2008

    "Three-dimensional computer analysis of white shark jaw mechanics: how hard can a great white bite?" S. Wroe et al., Journal of Zoology, August 12, 2008

    "Chronic intake of fermented floral nectar by wild treeshrews," Frank Wiens et al., PNAS, July 29, 2008

    It's not Easy Being Green (or Orange)
    Of 6,300 known amphibian species, one-third are vulnerable, endangered or critically endangered, say scientists in California. Tropical countries have the most amphibians and the most threatened species. The culprits? Habitat loss, global warming and the fungal disease chytridiomycosis.

    A Change in Strategy
    Milkweed plants defend themselves against caterpillars and other predators with toxins, spiky leaves and sticky latex. But a Cornell and Portland State University study of 38 milkweed species shows that the newest ones rely more on a different survival strategy: they regrow quickly after being damaged. Apparently resistance to predators is (relatively) futile.

    The Baddest Bite
    Australian-led researchers have found that a great white shark clamps down with a force of 2 tons. The most powerful bite known of any animal alive, that's 3 times the force of a lion and 23 times that of a person—though just a nip compared with the 12- to 20-ton bite of the extinct megalodon shark.

    Long-Tailed Tipplers
    Pen-tailed tree shrews and at least six other small mammals in Malaysia imbibe naturally fermented bertam palm flower nectar, which is up to 3.8 percent alcohol, like beer. The animals are the only ones (aside from humans) known to drink regularly, say the researchers, from Germany and elsewhere, who saw no "motor incoordination or other behavioral signs of inebriation." The animals appear to have a high alcohol tolerance.

    Observed
    Name: The Atlantic molly, Poecilia mexicana
    In Private: Males prefer to mate with large females. They also often pursue females that they have seen other males pursue.
    In Public: When rival males are present, a male disguises his choice of mate by feigning interest in a different female.
    In the Lab: Males went so far as to feign interest in a female of a different species, according to a new study by researchers from the University of Potsdam, Germany, and the University of Oklahoma. This bait-and-switch routine, the scientists say, may represent an attempt to direct rivals' attention away from the choicest female and avoid competing with other males.


     
    Comments

    Re: "Long-tailed Tipplers" The authors overlooked Cedar Waxwings, which bar-hop their way south every year getting sloshed on fermented crabapples & such.

    Posted by Milo D Folley on October 15,2008 | 11:15AM

    For some reason i find smithsonian one of the most interesting magazines, and i'm only 12! I dont really like to learn but i love reading thies magazines because it teaches you alot of different things.

    Posted by yvette on November 16,2008 | 03:22PM

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