Streetlights trap pill bugs in giant death spirals

Artificial streetlights are causing thousands of woodlice to form large circular "death spirals" in northern Israel. The behavior was documented by researchers from The Hebrew University of Jerusalem. It marks the first known instance of such collective movement in these ground-dwelling isopods.

The discovery began when amateur naturalist Eviatar Itzkovich observed swirling groups of isopods on summer nights in the Golan Heights. PhD student Idan Sheizaf, supervised by Prof. Ariel Chipman, led the study on the species Armadillo sordidus. Experiments showed that white light beams create circular boundaries that draw the animals into rotating formations of more than 5,000 individuals.

Magnets and ultraviolet light had no effect, confirming that the geometry of streetlight illumination triggers the response. Most participants were female and many carried eggs, ruling out mating as the cause. The study also recorded the species for the first time in the Jezreel Valley.

Researchers noted that the spirals can expose the isopods to predators, such as centipedes, and waste energy needed for survival. Idan Sheizaf stated that the circular pools of light interact with the animals' instincts to produce this unintended phenomenon.

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Photorealistic illustration of invasive flatworms including the Asian hammerhead worm discovered in Sweden.
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Two invasive flatworms discovered in Sweden

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Two new species of invasive flatworms have been discovered in Sweden, according to the Swedish Museum of Natural History. One is the Asian hammerhead worm that can grow up to 40 centimeters long.

Researchers from South American institutions have identified a new spider species, Pikelinia floydmuraria, named after the band Pink Floyd and its habitat on building walls. Despite measuring just 3 to 4 millimeters, the spider hunts ants up to six times its body size and targets urban pests like mosquitoes and flies. The findings appear in the journal Zoosystematics and Evolution.

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A newly identified spider in the rainforests of Queensland, Australia, constructs a conical snare that launches green tree ants upward into its web. The trap generates forces equivalent to 130 times gravity. Researchers documented the mechanism through high-speed filming in early 2023.

A new study from Lund University shows that moonlight is crucial for the migratory bird, the red-necked nightjar. The bird's feeding, migration, and breeding are entirely governed by the moon's cycle. Researchers highlight the vulnerability of nocturnal animals to changes in light environments.

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Scientists observed a rare tropical katydid changing color from bright pink to green over 11 days in Panama. The transformation helps the insect mimic young rainforest leaves that start pink before maturing green. Researchers describe it as a survival strategy rather than a mutation.

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የእኛን ጣቢያ ለማሻሻል ለትንታኔ ኩኪዎችን እንጠቀማለን። የእኛን የሚስጥር ፖሊሲ አንብቡ የሚስጥር ፖሊሲ ለተጨማሪ መረጃ።
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