Carminda Camara
@CarmindaC
07 August, 03:06
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Mr. Boxoffrogs
@boxoffrogs
07 August, 04:24
In response Carminda Camara to her Publication
There was this foundational study that I can not remember the name and it may have been purposefully scrubbed from the internet but it involved the Generational Memory of the Butterfly (I'm sure it was a specific species but I am quoting from my own memory banks because I can't remember the name of the study). It concluded that the butterfly remembered things across many generations and that even if an entire population was wiped out by some freak event, that their offspring would inherently know which route to take to a known spawning point and/or specific food source. So if a tiny bug brain can do that, imagine what we must have stored away, just from our physical bodies having combined from two gene sets. Diversity would NATURALLY BREED OUT this collective past memory as similar populations experienced the same sh*t and never collectively forgot. Like the St. Olaf scam for example. Anyone remember the study, spit it out!
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Ana Tate
@Anatated
07 August, 05:37
In response Mr. Boxoffrogs to his Publication
Sounds like Monarch butterflies. They would have to have stored genetic memory to follow the migration pattern through multiple generations.
Don’t know if it’s what you’re looking for, but it is an example.
https://www.naturallifeene...
Don’t know if it’s what you’re looking for, but it is an example.
https://www.naturallifeene...
Monarch Butterflies Make 4 Generations Of Butterflies Every Year | Alkaline Plant Based Diet
Monarch butterflies create 4 generations every year. Most live a few weeks, however the fourth generation lives several months in order to finish their journey....
https://www.naturallifeenergy.com/monarch-butterflies-make-4-generations-every-year/Notice: Undefined index: tg1tga_access in /home/admin/www/anonup.com/themes/default/apps/timeline/post.phtml on line 396
"The reason the Monarch butterfly is so fascinating is that it has an annual migratory pattern from various parts of the US to some specific locations in Mexico, however, the normal life cycle is a scant six to eight weeks for three of the four annual generations. Essentially, the butterflies live and breed through three generations each spring and summer in the US with the fourth generation migrating to Mexico and living there in the exact same trees as their fathers in semi hibernation for 5-6 months before breeding and the babies flying back to their respective summer homes in the US.
Fascinating! Four generations later they land in the same tree!!
Some scientists have postulated some kind of ‘genetic memory,’ the idea that something is coded into the DNA that is marking time through successive generations to make the fourth fly south and the next to fly north, each to a specific location!!"
https://youtu.be/QpffQtKN-...
Fascinating! Four generations later they land in the same tree!!
Some scientists have postulated some kind of ‘genetic memory,’ the idea that something is coded into the DNA that is marking time through successive generations to make the fourth fly south and the next to fly north, each to a specific location!!"
https://youtu.be/QpffQtKN-...
07:27 PM - Aug 07, 2022
In response Ana Tate to her Publication
Only people mentioned by boxoffrogs in this post can reply
I'm Smiling
@dannySonOfJohn
08 August, 09:34
In response Mr. Boxoffrogs to his Publication
Are these butterflies crossing the border legally?
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Pueos Perch @ 10,000ft.
@Hawkeye_Loccard
07 August, 11:33
In response Mr. Boxoffrogs to his Publication
....and they are dying off at a compounding rate. I've seen only 2-3 all year, and I'm currently near a famous "butterfly grove" on the California coast.
No bees either (NONE) and our fruit trees are looking barren from lack of pollinators. [they] have destroyed the natural rhythm and cycles of Mother Nature!
No bees either (NONE) and our fruit trees are looking barren from lack of pollinators. [they] have destroyed the natural rhythm and cycles of Mother Nature!
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Mr. Boxoffrogs
@boxoffrogs
08 August, 09:20
In response Pueos Perch @ 10,000ft. to his Publication
They are rare! I've only seen a few. This is my best photo of one in my former Baltimore City Yard. This may have been 2015-2017ish? I have not seen any this year at all.
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