China Naming Network - Eight-character fortune telling - Can animals predict the weather?
Can animals predict the weather?
the triple paradox after Guizhentang's listing: a new cultural policy: governing the country by culture? In the past 3 years, China has created a miracle of economic growth, and China's wealth ... This is a common but spectacular sight in Australia-on a hot day, when the air becomes humid, millions of ants usually on the ground seem to miraculously grow wings and fly into the air. Usually before the storm comes: it seems that ants know that the storm is coming and indicate that they will leave there as soon as possible. But can animals really predict the weather? They can use the clues around them. Simon Robson of the School of Marine and Tropical Biology at James Cook University said. "Many animals predict the coming of summer through their behavior. Because they perceive that the days are getting longer. Animals are very good at coordinating themselves with the changes of days and seasons. And they all have different ways to adapt. " Robson said. He said that on the surface, it seems that ants began to grow wings before the first storm in summer. In fact, they have been preparing for many weeks. "They are ready in the underground nest, ready to grow wings, waiting for this series of emergencies. If the storm comes at the wrong time, it will lead to some problems. Non-seasonal rain will cause animals to hibernate early. Then it gets cold again and they are in trouble. " Some people claim that animals themselves can predict storms because they will have headaches the day before the storm comes. But Robson said, "These are probably the responses of animals to low atmospheric pressure." Super-sensitive animals can also tune other clues from nature. Birds, for example, are said to be able to hear low-frequency echoes from valleys thousands of miles away. "They also have magnetic compasses that enable them to sail thousands of miles, even at night." Robson said. Many animals also have a very different world experience from ours. For example, insects can see the aurora-light will appear different colors to them according to different angles reflected from different surfaces. Fish will remember the stream they hatched, and corals will remember which coral reef they came from. Coral will also lay eggs in large quantities according to the combined environmental factors-water temperature, season and moon phase. "In contrast, our world is boring-we humans can only see light with a limited wavelength and sound with a limited frequency." He said. Australia's native bees will also adjust to natural events, said Dr Katiga Hogendolen of the University of Adelaide. Her research found that the time when the blue ribbon bees ended their eight-month hibernation was exactly the time when the desert flowers first opened. "Not to predict the time of flowering, honey is responding to high humidity, which also causes plants to sprout. This humidity also caused the pupae to stop hibernating and start hatching. Plants began to blossom, and at the same time honey began to change from pupa to adult. Bees and flowers enter their life cycle in parallel, which is mutually beneficial. " Hogan Duolun said. Dr. Robson said that the theory that animals can predict the weather and the theory of earthquakes are famous. "You have seen a lot of this in movies about the end of the world, but you can also see that when aliens come, animals are also the first to react. Usually animals can react first, it is said that they can detect something that we can't. "Animals can predict the weather? I can't despise the wonderful things that animals can do, but I need data and evidence. I think animals will be more successful if they can really predict the weather. If we think they can predict the future, we can take better care of them. "