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#shipworms — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #shipworms, aggregated by home.social.

  1. "Naked clams" as a source of food.

    "It was the shipworms’ insatiable appetite for all things wooden that caught the attention of David Willer, a scientist who studies sustainable aquaculture at the University of Cambridge. [...] [T]he animals seemed to him an intriguing and promising candidate for a big problem: Helping to feed the world."

    nautil.us/naked-clams-and-sunk

    #ShipWorms #Food

    @dantheclamman

  2. "Naked clams" as a source of food.

    "It was the shipworms’ insatiable appetite for all things wooden that caught the attention of David Willer, a scientist who studies sustainable aquaculture at the University of Cambridge. [...] [T]he animals seemed to him an intriguing and promising candidate for a big problem: Helping to feed the world."

    nautil.us/naked-clams-and-sunk

    #ShipWorms #Food

    @dantheclamman

  3. "Naked clams" as a source of food.

    "It was the shipworms’ insatiable appetite for all things wooden that caught the attention of David Willer, a scientist who studies sustainable aquaculture at the University of Cambridge. [...] [T]he animals seemed to him an intriguing and promising candidate for a big problem: Helping to feed the world."

    nautil.us/naked-clams-and-sunk

    #ShipWorms #Food

    @dantheclamman

  4. "Naked clams" as a source of food.

    "It was the shipworms’ insatiable appetite for all things wooden that caught the attention of David Willer, a scientist who studies sustainable aquaculture at the University of Cambridge. [...] [T]he animals seemed to him an intriguing and promising candidate for a big problem: Helping to feed the world."

    nautil.us/naked-clams-and-sunk

    #ShipWorms #Food

    @dantheclamman

  5. "Naked clams" as a source of food.

    "It was the shipworms’ insatiable appetite for all things wooden that caught the attention of David Willer, a scientist who studies sustainable aquaculture at the University of Cambridge. [...] [T]he animals seemed to him an intriguing and promising candidate for a big problem: Helping to feed the world."

    nautil.us/naked-clams-and-sunk

    #ShipWorms #Food

    @dantheclamman

  6. Researchers solve 2,000-year-old mystery of the destructive shipworm phys.org/news/2024-06-year-mys

    First report of microbial #symbionts in the digestive system of #shipworms; wood boring mollusks sciencedirect.com/science/arti

    "a population of symbiotic #microbes, living in an overlooked sub-organ of the gut called the #typhlosole, have the ability to secrete the #enzymes needed to digest #lignin—the toughest part of wood."

  7. Researchers solve 2,000-year-old mystery of the destructive shipworm phys.org/news/2024-06-year-mys

    First report of microbial #symbionts in the digestive system of #shipworms; wood boring mollusks sciencedirect.com/science/arti

    "a population of symbiotic #microbes, living in an overlooked sub-organ of the gut called the #typhlosole, have the ability to secrete the #enzymes needed to digest #lignin—the toughest part of wood."

  8. Researchers solve 2,000-year-old mystery of the destructive shipworm phys.org/news/2024-06-year-mys

    First report of microbial #symbionts in the digestive system of #shipworms; wood boring mollusks sciencedirect.com/science/arti

    "a population of symbiotic #microbes, living in an overlooked sub-organ of the gut called the #typhlosole, have the ability to secrete the #enzymes needed to digest #lignin—the toughest part of wood."

  9. Researchers solve 2,000-year-old mystery of the destructive shipworm phys.org/news/2024-06-year-mys

    First report of microbial #symbionts in the digestive system of #shipworms; wood boring mollusks sciencedirect.com/science/arti

    "a population of symbiotic #microbes, living in an overlooked sub-organ of the gut called the #typhlosole, have the ability to secrete the #enzymes needed to digest #lignin—the toughest part of wood."

  10. Researchers solve 2,000-year-old mystery of the destructive shipworm phys.org/news/2024-06-year-mys

    First report of microbial #symbionts in the digestive system of #shipworms; wood boring mollusks sciencedirect.com/science/arti

    "a population of symbiotic #microbes, living in an overlooked sub-organ of the gut called the #typhlosole, have the ability to secrete the #enzymes needed to digest #lignin—the toughest part of wood."