Close Menu
Ztoog
    What's Hot
    Mobile

    17 apps unpublished by Google Play for blackmail and extortion must be deleted

    Science

    How a Firefly Course Is Saving Japan’s Favorite Glowing Insect

    Science

    How to spot the constellations Perseus and Auriga

    Important Pages:
    • About Us
    • Contact us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms & Conditions
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
    Ztoog
    • Home
    • The Future

      How I Turn Unstructured PDFs into Revenue-Ready Spreadsheets

      Is it the best tool for 2025?

      The clocks that helped define time from London’s Royal Observatory

      Summer Movies Are Here, and So Are the New Popcorn Buckets

      India-Pak conflict: Pak appoints ISI chief, appointment comes in backdrop of the Pahalgam attack

    • Technology

      Ensure Hard Work Is Recognized With These 3 Steps

      Cicada map 2025: Where will Brood XIV cicadas emerge this spring?

      Is Duolingo the face of an AI jobs crisis?

      The US DOD transfers its AI-based Open Price Exploration for National Security program to nonprofit Critical Minerals Forum to boost Western supply deals (Ernest Scheyder/Reuters)

      The more Google kills Fitbit, the more I want a Fitbit Sense 3

    • Gadgets

      Maono Caster G1 Neo & PD200X Review: Budget Streaming Gear for Aspiring Creators

      Apple plans to split iPhone 18 launch into two phases in 2026

      Upgrade your desk to Starfleet status with this $95 USB-C hub

      37 Best Graduation Gift Ideas (2025): For College Grads

      Backblaze responds to claims of “sham accounting,” customer backups at risk

    • Mobile

      Samsung Galaxy S25 Edge promo materials leak

      What are people doing with those free T-Mobile lines? Way more than you’d expect

      Samsung doesn’t want budget Galaxy phones to use exclusive AI features

      COROS’s charging adapter is a neat solution to the smartwatch charging cable problem

      Fortnite said to return to the US iOS App Store next week following court verdict

    • Science

      Failed Soviet probe will soon crash to Earth – and we don’t know where

      Trump administration cuts off all future federal funding to Harvard

      Does kissing spread gluten? New research offers a clue.

      Why Balcony Solar Panels Haven’t Taken Off in the US

      ‘Dark photon’ theory of light aims to tear up a century of physics

    • AI

      How to build a better AI benchmark

      Q&A: A roadmap for revolutionizing health care through data-driven innovation | Ztoog

      This data set helps researchers spot harmful stereotypes in LLMs

      Making AI models more trustworthy for high-stakes settings | Ztoog

      The AI Hype Index: AI agent cyberattacks, racing robots, and musical models

    • Crypto

      ‘The Big Short’ Coming For Bitcoin? Why BTC Will Clear $110,000

      Bitcoin Holds Above $95K Despite Weak Blockchain Activity — Analytics Firm Explains Why

      eToro eyes US IPO launch as early as next week amid easing concerns over Trump’s tariffs

      Cardano ‘Looks Dope,’ Analyst Predicts Big Move Soon

      Speak at Ztoog Disrupt 2025: Applications now open

    Ztoog
    Home » These extinct termites have been stuck in a mating position for 38 million years
    Science

    These extinct termites have been stuck in a mating position for 38 million years

    Facebook Twitter Pinterest WhatsApp
    These extinct termites have been stuck in a mating position for 38 million years
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest WhatsApp

    It was a mosquito stuffed with dinosaur blood and encased in amber that helped deliver the fictional Jurassic Park to life. While actual world bugs stuck in sticky substances don’t result in harmful dinosaur parks (but), they do provide scientists a peek into their previous shapes and behaviors. A pair of 38 million year-old termites trapped in tree resin in the center of a mating habits are serving to scientists perceive the mating behaviors of extinct bugs. The discovering is detailed in a research printed March 5 in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS).

    The two termites are an extinct species referred to as Electrotermes affinis (E. affinis) and the invention of this fossil was a bit fortunate. Study co-author and entomologist from the Czech Academy of Sciences Aleš Buček noticed the piece of amber in a web based store for fossil collectors.

    “Termite fossils are very common, but this piece was unique because it contains a pair,” Buček stated in a assertion. “I have seen hundreds of fossils with termites enclosed, but never a pair,” 

    [Related: A 50-million-year-old insect testicle is one lucky find.]

    Buček bought the fossil and a group from the Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology’s (OIST) Evolutionary Genomics Unit in Japan used an X-ray micro-CT to take a nearer take a look at the bugs. 

    This close-up image of the fossilized termites reveals the parallel positioning of the 2 people encased in the amber. The bigger feminine (left) remains to be touching the smaller male (proper). CREDIT: Aleš Buček (OIST/The Czech Academy of Sciences)

    “Identifying the species was actually not easy, because there were bubbles in front of important parts of the termite’s bodies,” research co-author and OIST postdoctoral researcher Simon Hellemans, stated in a assertion. 

    The scan revealed what species they belonged to and likewise that the trapped termites had been a feminine and male laying aspect by aspect. The feminine’s mouthparts had been touching the tip of the male’s stomach. This positioning was acquainted to the researchers, as current day termites have interaction in a mating habits referred to as tandem working. The bugs show coordinated actions to maintain themselves collectively whereas exploring a new nest website. 

    two termites in a tandem run, with the male behind the female in a line
    Current day termites type a straight line when working behind one another. During the tandem run, one associate retains contact with the opposite utilizing their antenna or mouthparts, to verify they keep collectively whereas exploring a new nest website. CREDIT: Aleš Buček (OIST/The Czech Academy of Sciences)

    However, the fossilized pair’s irregular side-by-side positioning in the amber additionally stood out. A pair sometimes  would have been noticed mendacity behind one another. The group believed that because the preservation in the amber just isn’t an instantaneous course of, the termite’s regular mating behaviors will get interrupted. Their positions then shift whereas they’re being encased in the tremendous sticky tree resin. To check out this speculation, they simulated the method in the lab. 

    “Our approach focused on how fossils are created and how behavior changes during the insect’s death,” research co-author and Auburn University entomologist Nobuaki Mizumoto stated in a assertion. 

    [Related: When insects got wings, evolution really took off.]

    They checked out mating termite pairs and located that even when the main particular person bought trapped on a sticky floor, the follower didn’t escape or abandon their associate. Instead, they walked round them and likewise bought stuck in a position just like the termites stuck in amber. 

    “If a pair encounters a predator, they usually escape but I think on a sticky surface they do not realize the danger and get trapped,” stated Mizumoto.  

    According to the group, this new approach of recreating the method of getting stuck in tree resin allowed them to investigate the behaviors of an extinct species with a new quantity of precision.“For some things, fossils are simply the best evidence, a direct window to the past,” stated Buček and Mizumoto.

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp

    Related Posts

    Science

    Failed Soviet probe will soon crash to Earth – and we don’t know where

    Science

    Trump administration cuts off all future federal funding to Harvard

    Science

    Does kissing spread gluten? New research offers a clue.

    Science

    Why Balcony Solar Panels Haven’t Taken Off in the US

    Science

    ‘Dark photon’ theory of light aims to tear up a century of physics

    Science

    Signs of alien life on exoplanet K2-18b may just be statistical noise

    Science

    New study: There are lots of icy super-Earths

    Science

    Watch an owl try to eat a turtle whole

    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Follow Us
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Pinterest
    • Instagram
    Top Posts
    Technology

    Seven Mind Mapping Tools to Try This Year

    Earlier this week a reader emailed me to ask for my strategies for on-line thoughts…

    Mobile

    Honor 200 Lite goes on sale in India

    The Honor 200 Lite, launched final week in India, is now on sale by means…

    AI

    Adept AI Open-Sources Fuyu-8B: A Multimodal Architecture for Artificial Intelligence Agents

    In synthetic intelligence, the seamless fusion of textual and visible information has lengthy been a…

    Gadgets

    Spotify’s second price hike in 9 months will target audiobook listeners

    (*9*) Spotify Premium subscriptions embrace as much as 15 hours of audiobook listening. But beginning…

    Science

    JWST captures the Whirlpool Galaxy in all its glory

    The James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) has captured a stellar new picture of the Whirlpool…

    Our Picks
    AI

    Unlocking the Secrets of CLIP’s Data Success: Introducing MetaCLIP for Optimized Language-Image Pre-training

    Crypto

    Will Correction Trend Push BNB Under $200?

    The Future

    5 Common Mistakes New PlayStation 5 Owners Make

    Categories
    • AI (1,482)
    • Crypto (1,744)
    • Gadgets (1,796)
    • Mobile (1,839)
    • Science (1,853)
    • Technology (1,789)
    • The Future (1,635)
    Most Popular
    Mobile

    You can now have custom action buttons on Wear OS with a new Google Assistant tile

    Gadgets

    Valve gives Steam its biggest update and redesign in years

    Crypto

    How Urvashi Barooah broke into venture after everyone told her she couldn’t

    Ztoog
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
    • Home
    • About Us
    • Contact us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms & Conditions
    © 2025 Ztoog.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.