Mimosa pudica Type post Author Denyse O’Leary Date April 15, 2022 CategoriesBiologyBotanyLife SciencesNeuroscience & MindPsychology Tagged , anesthesia, Claude Bernard, consciousness, fungi, gene expression, glutamate, heliotropism, miRNAs, nervous system, Rainer Hedrich, RNA, Venus flytrap, worms How Plants Talk When We’re Not Around Denyse O’Leary April 15, 2022 Biology, Botany, Life Sciences, Neuroscience & Mind, Psychology 5 One genuine surprise in recent decades has been the discovery that plants have nervous systems like animals. Read More ›
honeybee Type post Date December 3, 2019 CategoriesIntelligent Design Tagged , __edited, bacterial flagella, Biomimetics, cars, computers, Drexel University, enzymes, evolution, fungi, heat dissipation, heliotropism, intelligent design, jumping spiders, Nature (journal), Nature Communications, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Research, Royal Society Interface, silk, spider silk, spores, sunflowers, thermoregulation, University of California ID-Friendly Biomimetic Research Continues Apace Science and Culture December 3, 2019 Intelligent Design 4 The word “biomimetics” entered the dictionary in 1974. In the 45 years since, scientists have found design inspiration in everything biological from molecules to mammals. Read More ›