Fauna
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Vertebrates

This reading profile brings together 7 source-linked articles that reference vertebrates.

Fauna does not yet have a full sourced identification profile for this name, so this page keeps the relevant reading together without inventing missing species detail.
Across Fauna

Source-linked reading

  1. Field guideHow animals see in low lightScarce photons are the central problem: anatomy can admit more light, rods and photopigments capture it, reflective layers offer a second pass, and neural circuits combine signals across space or time while accepting blur and noise.
  2. Field guideHow animals care for their youngCare for offspring is much broader than feeding a recognizable baby. Animals may prepare or defend a nest, clean or oxygenate eggs, regulate temperature, transport young, provision food, teach specialized skills in rare documented cases, or receive help from non-parent caregivers—and many successful life histories use little care after eggs are laid.
  3. Field guideHow animals sense vibrationsA vibrating medium bends hairs, strains joints, moves sensory masses, or displaces water; timing and amplitude across receptors help locate a source, while substrate properties filter which frequencies travel.
  4. Field guideHow animals survive droughtBurrows and nocturnality reduce exposure, kidneys and body surfaces conserve water, diet and stored fuels supply some water, and aestivation lowers demand; each strategy trades activity, growth, or reproduction for survival.
  5. Field guideHow caterpillars defend themselvesA caterpillar's defense is often layered. Avoiding detection comes first; after discovery it may posture, flee, drop, expose spines, click, regurgitate, or advertise chemicals acquired from its host plant.
  6. Field guideHow day length shapes animal seasonsPhotoreceptors and biological clocks measure light-dark patterns, endocrine pathways translate them into seasonal change, and supplementary cues fine-tune the response; latitude and climate alter how useful the signal is.
  7. Field guideHow plants defend against herbivoresThorns, hairs, waxes, tough tissue, toxins, digestibility reducers, wound sealing, regrowth, and herbivore-induced chemistry form layered defenses. Volatiles and extrafloral nectar can alter predator or parasitoid behavior. Herbivores in turn avoid, detoxify, sequester, or suppress plant defenses, making outcomes specific to each interaction.