So I built a stegosaurus model kit, which included some factoids in the instructions. One of these factoids was that stegosaurs are not believed to have had a secondary brain in the hips to help them control their rear half after all. That was wild to me, since the whole stegosaurs and sauropods with their tiny heads needing a secondary brain for their huge bodies was commonly accepted back when I was a kid. So I looked it up, and indeed, the current hypothesis is that the cavity that the second brain was thought to occupy is used for a thing called a glycogen body. But what exactly does a glycogen body do? We’ll get back to you on that, apparently.

  • too_high_for_this@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    What the fuck is that article? It’s absolute nonsense. Like a first gen AI was trained on a single biology textbook.

    The mosquito brain has three main parts: the antennae, the maxillary palps, and the proboscis.

    Octopuses don’t have any real social structure like mammals do. Instead, they communicate through chemical signals. But these chemicals can transmit emotions just as effectively as words and they have two eyes.

    Animals with multiple brains include octopuses, cephalopods (squid), and even humans.

    The brain of a cuttlefish is located in the head, which is made up of two parts: the upper part contains the eyes, and the lower part contains the mouth.

    Cuttlefish is one of the smartest animals in the world. They are able to solve complex mathematical equations

    • BreadstickNinja@lemmy.world
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      5 hours ago

      You didn’t know that cuttlefish can derive non-trivial solutions of the Einstein field equations? They can solve all ten at once because they have ten brains.

      • too_high_for_this@lemmy.world
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        2 days ago

        The entire website is like that. Except nearly every article is

        "These are the only 27 animals that have blue eyes!

        Humans are the only species with blue eyes

        Other species with blue eyes include the Siberian Huskie, the Great Dane, and the Dalmatian