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Showing posts with the label Plant & Animal World (English - Vietnamese)

New Owl Species Found—and It Has a Haunting Screech (Phát Hiện Loài Cú Có Tiếng Kêu Ám Ảnh)

Living only in the old-growth forests of Príncipe Island, the tiny bird is likely already critically endangered, experts say. Các chuyên gia cho biết, loài chim nhỏ bé này chỉ sống ở rừng nguyên sinh thuộc đảo Príncipe, có nguy cơ tuyệt chủng cao. https://syntheticbilingual.blogspot.com/2022/11/new-owl-species-foundand-it-has.html By  JASON BITTEL       PUBLISHED NOVEMBER 1, 2022 Source:  https://www.nationalgeographic.com/animals/article/a-new-species-of-owl-has-been-discovered?fbclid=IwAR3RWH6SMKkmXmtUuTstFrd3EhXJt0OERGpf8bRiuBir34bGL7WCUow7vhQ (Vui lòng xem bản dịch tiếng Việt bên dưới) Just off Africa’s western coast, there’s a small island known as Príncipe where strange screeches haunt the night. Not many people have heard the noises, which emanate from the old-growth forests on the southern, uninhabited part of the island.   They start just after sunset and sometimes sound like the rasp of an insect, the mewling of a cat, or perhaps the call of a monkey. Locals first noted the

Over 60 Feet Long – Scientists Discover the New World’s Largest Omnivore (Các Nhà Khoa Học Phát Hiện Động Vật Ăn Tạp To Lớn Nhất - Dài Hơn 60 Feet - Tại Tân Thế Giới)

Marine biologists have discovered that whale sharks consume plants, making the famous species the largest omnivore in the world. Các nhà sinh vật biển phát hiện cá mập voi tiêu thụ thực vật, khiến chúng trở thành loài sinh vật ăn tạp lớn nhất Thế Giới. https://syntheticbilingual.blogspot.com/2022/09/over-60-feet-long-scientists-discover.html By  AUSTRALIAN INSTITUTE OF MARINE SCIENCE   SEPTEMBER 10, 2022 Source:  https://scitechdaily.com/over-60-feet-long-scientists-discover-the-new-worlds-largest-omnivore/?fbclid=IwAR2m7_ZXxGuFud82lRi1IsQo4xFEZmpOSUOxzaOPMwiaztROjOGJGb1vmBg (Vui lòng xem bản dịch tiếng Việt bên dưới) Whale sharks consume plants, according to marine biologists, making the iconic animal the world’s biggest omnivore. Whale sharks are filter feeders, and in Western Australia’s Ningaloo Reef, they have long been seen consuming krill. However, scientists found that whale sharks in the reef were consuming a lot of plant material when they analyzed biopsy samples from the an

A Greenland Shark, One of the Longest-living Animals on Earth, Was Caught Near Belize (Cá Mập Greenland - Một Trong Những Loài Động Vật Sống Lâu Nhất Hành Tinh - Vừa Bị Đánh Bắt Gần Belize)

https://syntheticbilingual.blogspot.com/2022/08/a-greenland-shark-one-of-longest-living.html By Dustin Johns  July 31, 2022 9:10 PM ET Source:  https://www.npr.org/2022/07/31/1114807928/greenland-shark-longest-living-animal-caught-in-belize?fbclid=IwAR1O1eXK1hZkzqhO0Ak20MofzzS6gjdloSwIKqeNdlrky0_0pAQY9xVfICM (Vui lòng xem bản dịch tiếng Việt bên dưới) Researchers tagging tiger sharks off the southern coast of Belize couldn't believe their eyes when they recently reeled in a different kind of fish. It turned out to be a Greenland shark, which is typically found in the Arctic and can live to be over 500 years old. The team of scientists thought the shark was dead when they finally hauled it to the surface. Unlike the tiger sharks they were after, this particular shark had black, worn-looking skin and pale blue eyes. Devanshi Kasana, a Ph.D. candidate at the Florida International University Predator Ecology and Conservation lab, said the shark looked "really, really old. &qu

Mushroom Magic: 5 Ways Fungus-based Technology Will Change the World (Ma Lực Nấm: 5 Phương Pháp Dựa Trên Công Nghệ Nấm Sẽ Thay Đổi Thế Giới)

https://syntheticbilingual.blogspot.com/2022/06/mushroom-magic-5-ways-fungus-based.html By  Eugenia Bone Published: 23rd May, 2022 at 04:00 Source:  https://www.sciencefocus.com/nature/fungus-technology/?fbclid=IwAR3zOZXkDkaYLCOr6UWtoQTJwzOFMmQfgFDrmmLAZjdY_3u6CVAcZ8fvPsc (Vui lòng xem bản dịch tiếng Việt bên dưới) Mushrooms aren’t just a delicious pizza topping. They could help us colonise other planets, tackle plastic pollution and even rescue beleaguered bees. Did you know there are 10 times more species of fungi than plants? That with every woodland footfall we are stepping on kilometres of fungal threads? Or that with every breath, we breathe in up to 10 fungal spores? If you don’t, you are not alone. Most of us are ignorant about the fungi kingdom. Perhaps it’s because, for many people, these incredible organisms have the ‘ick factor’. A large number of fungi are decomposers: they get their food by harvesting nutrients from dead and dying organisms, and we often associ