Buddy power warms tent caterpillars.A new analysis of life in a tent full of caterpillars reveals more heat and more insulation than scientists had expected. The dark, fuzzy fuzz·y adj. fuzz·i·er, fuzz·i·est 1. Covered with fuzz. 2. Of or resembling fuzz. 3. Not clear; indistinct: a fuzzy recollection of past events. 4. caterpillars of the eggar moth, Eriogaster lanestris, spin silk tents where 200 or so siblings siblings npl (formal) → frères et sœurs mpl (de mêmes parents) cluster between their three daily, mass forays for food. Caterpillars can bask in sunlight to soak up warmth, but most earlier studies suggested that once the sun goes down, tent caterpillars See Lackey caterpillar were out of luck, says Claudia Ruf of the University of Bayreuth Founded in 1975, the University of Bayreuth is one of the youngest universities in Germany. It's a medium size university with 9,500 students and 186 professorships. (2004/2005) External link
Measurements that she and her Bayreuth colleague Konrad Fiedler made, however, indicate that metabolic heat of caterpillars snuggling in a tent can slowly raise the temperature some 2.5 [degrees] to 3 [degrees] C. In the April NATURWISSENSCHAFTEN, the researchers also describe their comparison of temperatures in a box containing 30 caterpillars with those in a box lacking caterpillars. Earlier work had dismissed silk tents as insulation. However, Ruf and Fiedler noticed that when the outside temperature dropped, the inside of an empty tent cooled more slowly. A slight boost in temperature can save days in development time, so Ruf and Fiedler propose that the warmth might have helped drive evolution of the gregarious gre·gar·i·ous adj. 1. Seeking and enjoying the company of others; sociable. See Synonyms at social. 2. Tending to move in or form a group with others of the same kind: gregarious bird species. tenting life. |
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