Author Topic: New research suggests evolution might favor 'survival of the laziest'  (Read 360 times)

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Online Wingnut

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Millennials  are overjoyed with new study findings. 


If you've got an unemployed, 30-year-old adult child still living in the basement, fear not.

A new large-data study of fossil and extant bivalves and gastropods in the Atlantic Ocean suggests laziness might be a fruitful strategy for survival of individuals, species and even communities of species. The results have just been published in the Proceedings of the Royal Society B by a research team based at the University of Kansas.

Looking at a period of roughly 5 million years from the mid-Pliocene to the present, the researchers analyzed 299 species' metabolic rates—or, the amount of energy the organisms need to live their daily lives—and found higher metabolic rates were a reliable predictor of extinction likelihood.

https://phys.org/news/2018-08-evolution-favor-survival-laziest.html
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Offline Snarknado

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Re: New research suggests evolution might favor 'survival of the laziest'
« Reply #1 on: August 22, 2018, 12:20:03 pm »
I can confirm this finding - I don't have as many hummingbirds visiting my feeders this year...
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