Posted on 06/30/2022 6:16:30 AM PDT by Red Badger
Shades of “Tremors”
Reminds me of the deep state
.
“Feed me” (little shop of horrors I think was the movie)
Triffids? Get out the sea water sprayers quick!
“Feed me, Seymour!”
This is where I stopped reading...
They are in Borneo, so no problem!.............
Maybe, knowing exactly where these are would help.
Mount Apad Runan is even higher and appears to be a relatively soggy and humid place today. Given where most Nepenthes grow today I do understand why he might think it was to increase moisture availability.
Snake pelvises and whale femurs. Not everything we see today is an adaptation to present needs.
Not much elevation is needed for temperatures to drop precipitously. While the area is safe from frost today the higher elevation areas get comparatively cool during the winter nights. Succulents generally do poorly in cold places. Has this species been around for a while and may this be an adaptation to escape frost during the ice ages? It wouldnt take much soil to protect a plant and its roots, and in this case water filled pitchers, in a marginal environment.
If it works well enough then there would be no pressure to switch back to the more standard form.
Borneo................
Pictures could use something of a known size to provide a clue to as to their potential prey - mite or moose?
“Funnily enough” ??
Adverbing.....................
Future human space travelers will need to consider the possibility of simlar types of biological life but in larger sizes and scale than seen on earth. No sarcasm, just crystal ball gazing LOL.
maybe it can catch PeLOUSy and HilLIARy there?
Getting serious Bat Creatures vide from ‘The Beastmaster’ movie
And what about Borneo? I cited Mount Apad Runan so you know that I know that the article states Borneo.
You may have heard that Mobile, Alabama and Yuma, Arizona are in the same country on the same contiguous landmass yet have somewhat different environments.
This ecologically unique species lives “in a mountainous ridge-top region at an elevation of about 1,100–1,300 meters” but that doesnt tell us which or where. Is this a foothill of Apad Runan? Is this further toward the eastern shore or toward the Southern part of North Kalimantan making it the central part of the island? Small changes like that in location had have a major effect on the local environment.
Michal Golos states “We hypothesize that underground cavities have more stable environmental conditions, including humidity, and there is presumably also more potential prey during dry periods,” which, without location data, makes no sense only on face value. Is there actually any place in Borneo, however small, that an relatively arid environment would be of concern? They get from 4-18 inches of precipitation per month, in my state known for agriculture (that has multiple types of pitcher plants) we get 1-6 inches per month yet in most local areas too much water is more likely a problem than not enough. Then again most Nepenthes grow in swampy bogs not mountain ridges. So where does such a ridge exist in Borneo?
Not knowing which ridge these grow on stops us from further analyzing the hypothesis leaving us only to accept or reject his hypothesis which isnt much of a discussion.
How do they know that THIS ONE isn’t the ORIGINAL, and ALL THE OTHERS EVOLVED TO FIT THEIR ENVIRONMENTS?..............
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