The ants become compelled to climb to the top of elevated vegetation, where they remain affixed and die. The high elevation allows the fungus to grow and later spread its spores widely. Below, you can watch a video showing how the parasitic fungus infects its victims, leading them to their death.
They found that a previously unknown species of the Zatypota wasp can manipulate spiders from the Anelosimus eximius species to an extent that researchers have never before witnessed in nature. But Fernandez-Fournier and team noticed that members of this species infected with Zatypota larva exhibited bizarre behavior, leaving their colony to weave tightly-spun, cocoon-like webs in remote locations.
Further research presented a gruesome string of events. The Zatypota wasps lay eggs on the abdomen of A. When the egg hatches and the wasp larva emerges, it starts feeding on the spider and begins to take control of its body.
When the larva has gained full control of its host, it turns it into a zombie-like creature that is compelled to stray away from its mates and spin the cocoon-like nest that will allow the larva to grow into the adult wasp.
But while reviving dead humans may not be on the cards for our race just yet, reviving other organisms is. This can be particularly unsettling when we think that those organisms are… viruses. Giant viruses are called this way because, though still tiny, they are easily visible under the microscope. But there is something else that makes P. It is a DNA virus that contains a large number of genes — as many as , to be precise.
This is in stark contrast with other DNA viruses, such as the human immunodeficiency virus HIV , which only contains about 12 genes in all. The size of giant viruses, as well as the fact that they contain such a large amount of DNA, can make them particularly dangerous, explain the researchers who discovered P.
Yet Claverie and Abergel warn that there may be similar giant viruses buried inside the permafrost that could prove dangerous to humans. Though they have remained safely contained so far, global heating and human action could cause them to resurface and come back to life, which might bring about unknown threats to health. The bacteria — which insects disseminate — infect plants such as goldenrods, which have yellow flowers.
The infection causes the goldenrods to put out leaf-like extensions instead of their usual blooms. Eventually, they only serve the spread of the bacteria. But can humans turn into zombies, too? In the s, Dr. What could be scarier than to live forever in a Universe that will end in a billion-year-long dissolution into nothingness? Zombies, everywhere, raise this spectre, over and over.
Childhood and adolescence. For a child, being carefree is intrinsic to a well-lived life. Luara Ferracioli. Meaning and the good life. Sooner or later we all face death. Will a sense of meaning help us? Warren Ward. Philosophy of mind. Kristopher Nielsen. Values and beliefs. Why do you believe what you do?
Run some diagnostics on it. When people think of a mummy, they often envision the early Hollywood-era versions of human forms wrapped in layers upon layers of bandages, arms outstretched as they slowly shuffle The United States may have one of the largest armies on earth, but even the Pentagon has taken no chances at being caught off-guard by an unusual foe.
In fact, in , the U. Department of Defense released a strategy to combat a potential zombie apocalypse. While the potential Vampires are evil mythological beings who roam the world at night searching for people whose blood they feed upon. They may be the best-known classic monsters of all. The werewolf is a mythological animal and the subject of many stories throughout the world—and more than a few nightmares.
Werewolves are, according to some legends, people who morph into vicious, powerful wolves. Others are a mutant combination of human and wolf. But all are The Devil, also referred to as Satan, is best known as the personification of evil and the nemesis of good people everywhere. His image and story have evolved over the years, and the Devil has been called many different names in various cultures: Beelzebub, Lucifer, Satan and Witches were perceived as evil beings by early Christians in Europe, inspiring the iconic Halloween figure.
Images of witches have appeared in various forms throughout history—from evil, wart-nosed women huddling over a cauldron of boiling liquid to hag-faced, cackling beings Plato c. Long considered a harbinger of bad luck, Friday the 13th has inspired a late 19th-century secret society, an early 20th-century novel, a horror film franchise and not one but two unwieldy terms—paraskavedekatriaphobia and friggatriskaidekaphobia—that describe fear of this Although accounts of an aquatic beast living in the lake date back 1, years, all efforts to find any credible evidence of the animal have failed.
Live TV. This Day In History. History Vault. Origin of Zombies The Ancient Greeks may have been the first civilization terrorized by a fear of the undead. Zombies and Voodoo Voodoo sometimes spelled vodou or vodun is a religion based in West Africa and practiced throughout Haiti and the Caribbean, Brazil, the American South and other places with an African heritage. Recommended for you.
History of Zombies. Zombies and the Plague. Zombies and Technology. Mummy History A mummy is a person or animal whose body has been dried or otherwise preserved after death. Are You Prepared for a Zombie Apocalypse? The U.
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