ABB
Mare X Aktiv Biologa Beograda
20/10/2025
To modern eyes, it sounds bizarre—but placing a live frog in a milk bucket was once a clever survival tactic. In rural Russia and Finland, people noticed that milk stayed fresh longer when a frog was swimming in it. This tradition, passed down for generations, was based on keen observation rather than scientific understanding.
Years later, researchers discovered the truth: brown frogs secrete powerful antimicrobial peptides through their skin—natural compounds that fight off bacteria. What seemed like folklore turned out to be early biochemistry in action. A frog in your milk wasn’t just a rural myth—it was an unwitting act of preservation. 🐸🥛🔬
20/10/2025
20/10/2025
Even billionaires get bored! Sergey Nochovnyy, a Russian businessman earning $2 million a year (₹17 crore), once took a $13/day delivery job just to escape monotony.
From boardrooms to backstreets, Sergey discovered that real learning and perspective come from walking in someone else’s shoes.
Delivering food wasn’t about money - it was about breaking routine, finding joy, and seeing life differently.
His story reminds us that wealth doesn’t guarantee fulfillment, but curiosity, humility, and action do.
Step out of your comfort zone - it might inspire your next big move!
20/10/2025
The ocean’s greatest singers the blue whales are falling silent.
Scientists tracking whale songs off the coast of California have discovered a haunting trend: blue whale vocalizations have dropped by nearly 40% during years when ocean heatwaves strike hardest. These are the years when krill and anchovy populations collapse the main food sources whales depend on. Hungry and exhausted, the whales spend more time searching for food and less time singing.
But this silence isn’t just about sound it’s about survival. The loss of food at the bottom of the ocean’s food web ripples upward, weakening the entire ecosystem. Fewer krill mean stressed whales, lower birth rates, and quieter oceans. Scientists say the silence is nature’s alarm bell, warning of warming waters, algal blooms, and disrupted currents. Yet there’s still hope when food returns, the songs come back. The message is clear: protect the food, cool the planet, and let the ocean breathe again.
References
Blue whales are going eerily silent and scientists say it’s a warning sign - National Geographic
Audible changes in marine trophic ecology: Baleen whale song tracks foraging conditions in the eastern North Pacific - PLOS ONE
A tale of two whales: Songs reveal levels of resilience among whales - Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute
No, blue whales aren’t going silent off California. Here’s why - Live Science
20/10/2025
Singapore is redefining urban sustainability with its “vertical garden highways” — massive living walls designed to combat pollution and urban heat. These green installations are made up of thousands of carefully selected plant species that absorb carbon dioxide, trap fine dust particles, and release oxygen, creating cleaner air even in the heart of the city.
Beyond air purification, these vertical gardens play a major role in cooling the environment. Studies show that green walls can reduce surrounding air temperatures by up to 8°F (about 4.5°C) by absorbing heat and increasing humidity. The vegetation also acts as a natural sound barrier, cutting traffic noise levels by as much as 50%. For residents living near highways, that means quieter, cleaner, and cooler neighborhoods — all powered by plants.
Singapore’s green approach isn’t just about aesthetics — it’s part of a broader vision called the “City in a Garden.” By merging architecture with ecology, the nation proves that urbanization and nature can thrive side by side, turning concrete jungles into vibrant, sustainable ecosystems.
20/10/2025
Some spiders pull off an incredible trick by looking and acting just like ants, a strategy called myrmecomorphy. Over 300 species do this to avoid getting eaten or to sneak up on prey. They wave their front legs like ant antennae, move in zig-zag paths, and even sport shiny hairs or false waists to match ants’ bodies.
This mimicry fools predators that steer clear of aggressive ants, which often pack stings or acid. It also lets spiders raid ant nests or hunt lone ants safely. Jumping spiders are top pros at this, with adaptations that blend right in during hunts or escapes.
20/10/2025
☀️✈️ The Plane That Flew Around the World Without a Drop of Fuel 🌍
Built in Switzerland, the Solar Impulse 2 became the world’s first aircraft to circle the globe powered only by sunlight — no fuel, no emissions, just pure innovation.
Visionaries Bertrand Piccard and André Borschberg designed this solar-powered giant, which flew 40,000 km across oceans and continents, day and night, using 17,000 solar cells to power its silent electric engines. ⚡
It wasn’t just a flight — it was a message to the world:
💡 Clean energy can go the distance.
Solar Impulse 2’s journey inspired global research in solar propulsion, lightweight materials, and energy-efficient aviation, proving that sustainability and exploration can soar together. 🌞💚
19/10/2025
In Australia, scientists have witnessed a rare example of evolution happening in real time. A species of skink, a small lizard, is changing from laying eggs to giving birth to live young. Within this species, some groups still lay eggs while others have already adapted to give birth.
Researchers believe this change is caused by shifting climates and environmental pressures. Giving birth to live young increases the chances of survival in colder or unpredictable conditions where eggs might not develop safely.
This discovery offers a clear glimpse into evolution as it happens and shows how life continues to adapt in order to survive. It reminds us that evolution is not just a story from the past but an ongoing process shaping the world around us.
19/10/2025
This behavior had never been seen before in a non-human animal. https://trib.al/OL04zWN
19/10/2025
Researchers studying the limits of human biology have identified what may be the absolute maximum human lifespan — approximately 120 to 150 years. Using data from thousands of volunteers and advanced biomarker tracking, scientists analyzed how quickly the body loses its ability to recover from stress.
The results revealed that after a certain point, the body’s repair systems permanently slow down, regardless of lifestyle, genetics, or medicine. Even with perfect health and technology, human cells reach an irreversible fatigue limit known as the “critical point of resilience.”
However, ongoing studies in cell rejuvenation, genetic editing, and AI-driven medicine suggest this ceiling might one day be extended. With advances in senolytics (drugs that remove aging cells) and stem-cell therapies, scientists believe humans could soon live well beyond 120 years — in good health.
For now, though, this research underscores a simple truth: longevity isn’t just about living longer, but living better.
19/10/2025
Long before clocks, humanity looked to the heavens for timekeeping. The Sun marked hours through its shadows, the Moon counted days with its changing phases, and the stars revealed months as constellations shifted across seasons. Together, they formed Earth’s first cosmic calendar, a perfect harmony between nature’s motion and human understanding of time.
19/10/2025
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