• @Ledericas@lemm.ee
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    163 months ago

    invasive plants do this all the time, they are hard to eradicate once they become establish.

  • @ianhclark510@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    313 months ago

    the Clone Wars would have been a lot more interesting if the clone troopers just split/budded, would explain all the different patterns and emerging behaviors

  • @azi@mander.xyz
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    63 months ago

    Marbled crayfish are pretty cool. A new species that evolved in captivity

    • @Sidhean@lemmy.world
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      43 months ago

      Oh, these things are wild! A new species that clones itself rapidly, can carry a crayfish-killing plague, and is relatively rapidly colonizing the planet (freshwater only).

      This feels like a thing spiders do. They can produce several clutches of eggs after mating once. If, without a mate, they could just… do that, “even a single wolf spider egg can contaminate an entire planet.”

      Its a good year for crayfish sci-fi horror

      • @Ledericas@lemm.ee
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        43 months ago

        people often forget invasive species often bring diseases with them, that they are adapted to but in a new environment with others species that have no natural immunity, it would wipe native populations faster than the actual animal itself.

  • @perestroika@lemm.ee
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    3 months ago

    Realizing that they reproduce via parthenogenesis, and this involves laying eggs, I think the appropriate title would be “she big, she attac”. :)

    It’s a strange species. Common ancestor around 1988.

  • @Geodad@lemm.ee
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    563 months ago

    The downside to cloning as a reproductive system is that the entire population will have the same genetics and be vulnerable to the same diseases and poisons.

      • @Geodad@lemm.ee
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        103 months ago

        Sure, but the population would be so similar that it probably wouldn’t make much difference.

          • @ryedaft@sh.itjust.works
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            33 months ago

            I wish I didn’t know.

            As far as I can tell 1 week to hatch and 1 week to reach maturity seems like a good rule of thumb. Different species have different temperature optimums but I can’t see how that is practically relevant to anyone.

              • Iron Lynx
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                3 months ago

                Would I consider that on par with how the Tarantula Hawk Wasp reproduces?

                For those not in the know:

                Consider yourself warned.

                Tarantula Hawk Wasp mothers find themselves a tarantula - yep, a Hugh Jazz spider - and inject venom into the spider, instantly paralysing it. They then drag the paralysed but fully conscious spider to an underground hole, where they lay an egg on the spider. Her mission complete, momma flies off to do fuck knows what, leaving the paralysed spider behind with a ticking time bomb her egg.

                A few days later, that egg hatches, and the larva, seeing a perfectly tasty meal nearby, digs into the spider, eating it from the inside out, purposely avoiding vital organs to keep them alive as long as possible - while, again, the spider is fully aware what’s going on and completely powerless to do anything.

                Yes, they’re native to Australia. Why’d you ask?

                They’re also native to a few other places, Europe one of the few places they’re not native. Scratch this potentially, turns out my source doesn’t state this.

              • The Bard in Green
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                33 months ago

                I knew that.

                They also thrive on incest, and love to breed with their own parents and siblings.

                Bedbugs are already just super gross, but the more you learn about their biology the more gross they become.