| bio | website | |
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| location | Poland | |
| age | 24 | |
| visits | member for | 1 year, 5 months |
| seen | Apr 28 at 21:31 | |
| stats | profile views | 36 |
Student of College of Inter-Faculty Individual Studies in Mathematics and Natural Science (biology+maths) at University of Warsaw. Interests: ecology, evolutionary and theoretical biology.
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Jan 18 |
awarded | Good Question |
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Dec 14 |
awarded | Yearling |
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Sep 21 |
awarded | Custodian |
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Sep 11 |
revised |
What kind of fruit is this? deleted 22 characters in body |
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Sep 11 |
awarded | Nice Answer |
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Sep 8 |
revised |
What is the species of these mushrooms? edited tags |
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Sep 8 |
comment |
What is the species of these mushrooms? Please, describe where have you found them (geographic location, type of habitat). This kind of information is very useful for species identification. |
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Sep 5 |
awarded | Good Answer |
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Aug 31 |
answered | Is it possible for parasitic wasp to alter the behaviour of it's host after emerging from it? |
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Aug 31 |
revised |
Which part of a female mantises's DNA causes her to be a few times larger than a male mantis? added 1 characters in body |
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Aug 31 |
comment |
Why can't the brain and red blood cells use fuels other than glucose? But why the activity of the thiolase you mention is low in neurons? Has it any functional purpose? |
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Aug 29 |
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What kind of fruit is this? @darksky I've never eaten this kind of fruits so please don't blame me nor the SE community if they appear not edible. |
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Aug 28 |
revised |
What kind of fruit is this? added 140 characters in body |
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Aug 28 |
revised |
What kind of fruit is this? added 45 characters in body |
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Aug 28 |
revised |
What kind of fruit is this? added 77 characters in body |
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Aug 28 |
answered | What kind of fruit is this? |
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Aug 24 |
comment |
Is it possible for parasitic wasp to alter the behaviour of it's host after emerging from it? Thanks! It's even more fascinating, because of altruistic motive (unless polyembryony was common among Glyptapanteles so that all larvae in one host will be genetically the same). I ask if such change in behaviour is possible, because I don't completely trust the information in popular science sources. I would accept your answer, but first I'd like to wait, maybe someone will find anything about that mysterious virus. |
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Aug 23 |
asked | Is it possible for parasitic wasp to alter the behaviour of it's host after emerging from it? |
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Aug 22 |
comment |
Predators faking to be not hungry? I suppose that the reason why gazelles could graze in sight of sleeping lions is because the prey are aware of the predator's presence. That's why gazelles do not came close enough to be catched. Also lions quickly learn that there is no point to chase a prey if it already notice the threat. I'll make it an answer when I find adequate references. |
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Aug 15 |
reviewed | Close What are the various types of protein-protein interactions |