Venus_Flytrap_showing_trigger_hairs Type post Author David Coppedge Date August 16, 2023 CategoriesBiologyBotanyEngineeringIntelligent DesignLife Sciences Tagged , bioelectricity, C. elegans, codes, communication, cows, Current Biology, Darwinism, Dionaea muscipula, Duke University, human body, information, Linköping University, Michael Faraday, microbes, Phys.org, rabbits, Science Advances, Sweden, ticks, Velcro, Venus flytrap Bioelectricity Gives Biologists a Jolt David Coppedge August 16, 2023 Biology, Botany, Engineering, Intelligent Design, Life Sciences 7 We’ve explored bioelectricity in cells. We’ve looked at it within the human body. Now, electrical engineering is being found in the realms between. Read More ›
Venus flytrap 2 Type post Author Marcos Eberlin Date July 12, 2019 CategoriesBotanyChemistryEngineeringIntelligent Design Tagged , __edited, animal kingdom, bacteria, BBC, carnivorous plants, Charles Darwin, Darwinism, devolution, digestive system, Dionaea muscipula, evolution, evolutionary pathway, foresight, homology, homoplasy, insects, Marcos Eberlin, natural selection, Nepenthes, Nobel Prize, prey, Rainer Hedrich, United States, Venus flytrap The Lovable Venus Flytrap: A Design Analysis Marcos Eberlin July 12, 2019 Botany, Chemistry, Engineering, Intelligent Design 7 A correspondent sends along this remarkable nature video from the BBC and asks a good question. Read More ›