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WIRED

@WIRED ↗

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Last Checked April 28, 2021

Created

Wed Mar 10 01:06:30 +0000 2021

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WIRED @WIRED

A day after self-decapitation, the slug’s neck wound closes. After a week, it regenerates a heart. In less than a month, the whole body has grown back, and the disembodied slug is embodied once more 3/ https://t.co/fyIPFssn9k — PolitiTweet.org

Posted March 10, 2021 Hibernated

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WIRED @WIRED

This kind of body-splitting is known as autotomy—lizards, for instance, shed their tails to escape predation. Unlike lizards, though, this doesn’t appear to be a defensive strategy. And what the sacoglossan sea slug does next puts it in a class of its own 2/ https://t.co/97UAsYkM9p — PolitiTweet.org

Posted March 10, 2021 Hibernated

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WIRED @WIRED

Sacoglossan sea slugs are famous for their “kleptoplasty,” or the way they steal energy. In the algae that the animals eat, photosynthesis hums along in structures known as chloroplasts. Instead of digesting these, the sea slug actually incorporates them into its own tissues 4/ https://t.co/vgS7JpQRRX — PolitiTweet.org

Posted March 10, 2021 Hibernated

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