| PHOTOGRAPH BY JOEL SARTORE, NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC PHOTO ARK | | Not a snake: But this translucent, wormlike amphibian (above) may have venomous saliva, a new study says. The mostly blind, legless creatures, called caecilians, wiggle around forest floors grinding up earthworms with three sets of teeth. Researchers in Brazil, however, discovered a set of dental glands that produce saliva and, possibly, venomous enzymes, Jason Bittel reports for Nat Geo. If confirmed, it may be the first example ever of venom found in an amphibian.
Sanctuary? Project Chimps says its mission is to provide “lifelong exemplary care” for chimps that had been experimented on in laboratories. More than 20 current and former staffers and volunteers now question the quality of care at the northern Georgia compound. Nat Geo's Rachel Fobar investigates their claims of chimps receiving inadequate housing, veterinary care, stimulation, and time outside. The sanctuary is now suing its two most outspoken critics for defamation.
Follow-up: We’ve written previously about the tenuous condition of elephants in Botswana. Now, authorities are trying to determine the cause of a die-off of 356 elephants in the nation’s Okavango Delta. No tusks were removed. Could they have been poisoned? “The most important thing now is for an independent team to visit the area—sample multiple carcasses, the soil and waterways—and identify what is causing the deaths,” Mark Hiley, of the nonprofit anti-poaching group National Park Rescue, tells the New York Times.
Comeback: Elk have been flourishing in Kentucky, establishing their most significant population east of the Mississippi. Their home, in and near abandoned coal mines, is part of a reintroduction process that has stretched over two decades. They roam reclaimed plateaus with meadows and forests, the New York Times reports. “Elk can survive just about anywhere,” says Gabe Jenkins, a biologist with the Kentucky Department of Fish and Wildlife Resources. “They’ve just got to have some grass.”
The Marie Kondo enzyme: Yes, an enzyme found in fruit fly embryos has been named after the home organization guru, researchers report. Why? The enzyme, which destroys certain maternally deposited proteins, helps clear out stuff that no longer “sparks joy” for the embryo, as molecular biologist Olivia Rissland puts it. Hat tip to our tidy colleague Michael Greshko for the item. | | | |
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