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Summer Shape-up: How Student-Athletes are Preparing for the Upcoming Year
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After a Year of COVID-19 Chaos, Dos Pueblos High’s Return to School Like Starting Over
Sense of normalcy re-emerges as more students resume in-person instruction, but seniors may be the most excited class of all
From left, Dos Pueblos High School seniors Natalie Grover, Sasha Runyen and Noel Tsoukalas create their tiles for a new campus mural during lunchtime Friday. The project commemorates the school experiences that DPHS students missed out on during more than a year of COVID-19 disruption. (Brooke Holland / Noozhawk photo)
Dos Pueblos High students relax outdoors during lunch Friday. (Brooke Holland / Noozhawk photo)
Socially distanced students hang out inside the Dos Pueblos High library during lunch Friday. (Brooke Holland / Noozhawk photo)
Los ruidos también perjudican a las plantas
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Indian jumping ants have ability to shrink brain
Colony does not perish when queen dies as ‘chosen’ workers shrink their brains and expand their ovaries
By Natalie Grover / The Guardian
Few species in the animal kingdom can change the size of their brain. Fewer still can change it back to its original size. Now researchers have found the first insect species with that ability: Indian jumping ants.
They are like catnip to researchers in the field. In contrast to their cousins, Indian jumping ants colonies do not perish once their queen dies. Instead, “chosen” workers take her place with expanded ovaries and shrunken brains to produce offspring. But, if a worker’s “pseudo-queen” status is somehow revoked, their bodies can bounce back, the research suggests.