GlueGuy
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Re: Fire-flies: Mystery resolved
Thought everyone interested to know that the "how" of fireflies was just in the news. Here's an exerpt that came to me via InfoBeat.
*** Researchers solve firefly mystery
WASHINGTON (AP) - Researchers in Massachusetts have solved a longtime mystery about fireflies - discovering a chemical that lightning bugs use to precisely control their flashing signals of summertime romance. To turn their lights on and off, the researchers found that the bugs use nitric oxide, the same chemical that in humans helps the heart beat, aids brain function and triggers the male erection. Barry A. Trimmer, a biology researcher at Tufts University in Medford, Mass., said science has known for years the chemistry of the fireflies' light, but they were puzzled about how 200 species of the insects could create flashes in intricate, individual patterns that differed by fractional seconds. "That has been a long-standing mystery," said Trimmer. The firefly light pattern is a mating signal. Males blink a certain sequence and hope to see an answering flash from a female. Each of the 200 species have their own signal.
Full article
The GlueGuy
Thought everyone interested to know that the "how" of fireflies was just in the news. Here's an exerpt that came to me via InfoBeat.
*** Researchers solve firefly mystery
WASHINGTON (AP) - Researchers in Massachusetts have solved a longtime mystery about fireflies - discovering a chemical that lightning bugs use to precisely control their flashing signals of summertime romance. To turn their lights on and off, the researchers found that the bugs use nitric oxide, the same chemical that in humans helps the heart beat, aids brain function and triggers the male erection. Barry A. Trimmer, a biology researcher at Tufts University in Medford, Mass., said science has known for years the chemistry of the fireflies' light, but they were puzzled about how 200 species of the insects could create flashes in intricate, individual patterns that differed by fractional seconds. "That has been a long-standing mystery," said Trimmer. The firefly light pattern is a mating signal. Males blink a certain sequence and hope to see an answering flash from a female. Each of the 200 species have their own signal.
Full article
The GlueGuy