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TURNING UP THE HEAT ON OCEAN PARASITES: SINK OR SWIM?</a>
biology, marine biology The Dish On Science biology, marine biology The Dish On Science

TURNING UP THE HEAT ON OCEAN PARASITES: SINK OR SWIM?

If someone asks you what the most common life strategy on earth is, you might be surprised by the answer. It turns out that some 40% of known species on our planet are parasites. Parasites are organisms that spend at least some part of their life on or in a host species, at that host’s prolonged expense or eventual death. Rarely inspiring respect, parasites are more commonly considered scoundrels and degenerates, exploiting other species in order take the easiest route to reproductive bliss. But there is nothing easy about being a parasite. Many parasites have complex transmission, requiring successive infection of multiple different hosts in order to complete their lifecycle. In fact, that parasitism is so successful in the face of such complexity is a testament to the strategy’s evolutionary elegance. But how will this elegant life strategy hold up to accelerating climate change?

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THE STRANGE SEAHORSE TAIL
biology, marine biology, evolution Diana Lascala-Gruenewald biology, marine biology, evolution Diana Lascala-Gruenewald

THE STRANGE SEAHORSE TAIL

At first glance, the animal kingdom has no shortage of tails. From crocodiles to platypuses, squirrels to pigs and fish to boa constrictors, the shapes, sizes and textures are diverse. But whether flat, flexible, paddle-like, scaly, bare, mighty, curly or fluffy, all tails have one thing in common: they are roughly circular in cross-section. Of all the tails in all the world, there’s just one that differs. And it belongs to the seahorse.

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