Ancient larvae built predator-thwarting mazes | Science News

BALTIMORE — Modern animals such as rodents and platypuses dig underground labyrinths to confound predators. So did ancient insect larvae, new research suggests.

Branching tunnels called Treptichnus embedded inside ancient rocks are among the oldest and most widespread preserved structures built by ancient animals, first appearing about 541 million years ago. The mazelike layout of these subterranean passageways was meant to frustrate unwanted intruders, paleontologist Patrick Getty of the University of Connecticut in Storrs proposed November 1 at the Geological Society of America’s annual meeting.

The burrows, possibly dug by fly larvae, are composed of short, forking passageways. Scientists commonly describe these structures as the trails left behind by hungry sediment-munching critters. But that explanation misses the bigger picture, Getty said. Constructing an underground maze requires extra work compared with the efficiency of a single, spiraling tunnel like those left behind by some other sediment eaters, he says.

Analyzing Treptichnus in nearly 200-million-year-old sedimentary rock, Getty and colleagues realized that the tunnels served two purposes: feeding and defense. An invading predator would probably take multiple wrong turns as it hunted for its next meal and eventually give up, Getty proposed.

Tracing the origins of this maze-building behavior will provide clues about how predation has changed over time, Getty said.

Source: Ancient larvae built predator-thwarting mazes | Science News

Study to look at how people rest | SBS News

Scientists are undertaking a major worldwide study of rest in the 21st Century. The subjective nature of how people rest means it has been hard for the topic, so crucial for wellbeing, to be studied by researchers.

So, experts have put together an online “Rest Test” to gather thousands of responses from around the world on how people from different backgrounds do it.

The study is being launched on the UK’s Radio 4’s All in the Mind show and will be broadcast on the BBC World Service.

Source: Study to look at how people rest | SBS News

US to pursue Keystone pipeline review – Yahoo News

The United States said Tuesday it would carry on with its review of the controversial cross-border Keystone XL oil pipeline project despite a request from builder TransCanada for a pause in the process.

The company said Monday it had asked Secretary of State John Kerry to suspend the review, citing litigation pending in Nebraska, one of the states through which the pipeline would run to bring crude from Canada’s Alberta province to the Gulf of Mexico. TransCanada said a ruling in Nebraska would take seven to 12 months.

Source: US to pursue Keystone pipeline review – Yahoo News