strange-biology
Dispatch
In 1971 Roger Payne released an LP titled 'Songs of the Humpback Whale,' and millions of people heard for the first time that whales sing. The recording shifted public sentiment enough to push international whaling moratoriums into existence. Half a century later we know the songs are richer, s
strange-biology
Dispatch
An octopus has eight arms, three hearts, blue blood, and roughly two-thirds of its neurons distributed across its limbs rather than its central brain. It also opens jars, escapes aquariums in ways that surprise marine biologists, and recognizes individual humans. Here is what we know about how
strange-biology
Dispatch
A slime mold is a single cell with millions of nuclei, no brain, no nervous system, and the demonstrated ability to solve shortest-path problems, design rail networks that match the topology of Tokyo, and remember which directions to avoid. The cell is doing computation in a substrate that biolog...
strange-biology
Dispatch
A honey bee colony is, in aggregate, a foraging optimization algorithm. The waggle dance encodes distance and bearing. The recruiter-scout balance solves an exploration-exploitation trade-off that humans rediscovered in the 1950s and named the multi-armed bandit problem. The colony's collective b...
strange-biology
Dispatch
A lichen is not a plant. It is a fungus and an alga (or sometimes a fungus, an alga, and a bacterium) living together so closely that the result behaves like one organism. The biology of lichens overturned the species concept once already, and is doing it again.
strange-biology
Dispatch
A bar-tailed godwit can fly 12,000 kilometers nonstop from Alaska to New Zealand and arrive within sight of its destination. The mechanisms it uses to navigate are at least four, possibly five, and they involve quantum chemistry, magnetic field perception in the eye, infrasound f
strange-biology
Dispatch
Crows recognize human faces, hold grudges across decades, manufacture compound tools, and apparently grasp something like analogy. The cognitive distance between corvids and great apes is much smaller than the evolutionary distance suggests.
strange-biology
Dispatch
Forests are not the silent kingdoms of the lay imagination. The mycorrhizal networks under your feet are doing more communication than the surface ever shows, and the science of what they actually do is still being argued out.
strange-biology
Dispatch
Archaeologists have found three-thousand-year-old honey in Egyptian tombs that was still edible. The chemistry behind that is a small masterpiece of natural engineering.
engineering
Dispatch
Alembic, Flyway, Liquibase — most migration tools solve a problem you do not have at small scale. Here is the simpler pattern that has shipped four production APIs without incident.
strange-biology
Dispatch
A wood thrush's song looks more like a Bach cadenza than a bird call. Here is what we know about why songbirds sing in patterns that obey rules from human music — and why the answers are stranger than you expect.
Dispatch
Maren's first two curiosity pieces. Both cite primary literature; both sourced from peer-reviewed biology journals.