Quirks and Quarks

Jan 21: Fork-headed trilobite, echidnas blow snot bubbles, Perseverance delivery drop-off and more…

Farming fish lose their fertilizer and inoculation against misinformation.

Farming fish lose their fertilizer and inoculation against misinformation.

A photo of an echidna from a thermal camera. Echidna has a red body and a blue nose, indicating that the nose is kept cool.
Researchers at Australia's Curtin University used thermal cameras to study echidnas in the wild and find out how the monotremes keep cool without sweating or panting. Turns out the animals blow bubbles out of the tip of their nose, which then burst and cool down that part of their body. (Christine Cooper/Curtin University)

On this week's episode of Quirks & Quarks with Bob McDonald:

An ancient sea creature sported a massive fork on its head — what for?

Researchers have used 3D model reconstructions of a bizarre trilobite — an ancient shelled sea creature — to understand why it grew a trident as long as its whole body on its head. Alan Gishlick was part of a team that studied the unusual trilobite fossil. By modelling different options, they concluded in a study published in the journal PNAS that the forks were used for fighting other trilobites for mates.

READ MORE: Ancient sea creature sported a big fork on its head to toss away the competition

A three-dimensional rendering of a trilobite with a fork-like appendage at the front of its body.
A 3D model of a Walliserops trifurcatus trilobite, which sports a unique trident at the front of its head. (Alan D. Gishlick)

Echidnas blow snot bubbles to keep cool under the Australian sun

Echidnas, sometimes known as spiny anteaters, are one of Australia's unique animals, resembling hedgehogs with a tubular, rounded beak. They can't sweat, pant or lick, so they have to get inventive with ways to stay cool. Dr. Christine Cooper at Australia's Curtin University used thermal cameras to observe echidnas in the wild, which helped confirm something she and her students saw in the lab – echidnas blow bubbles out of their nose. Once the bubbles burst and evaporate, they help the animals cool down. The study was published in the journal Biology Letters.


The Mars Perseverance rover is caching samples for return to Earth

NASA's newest Mars rover has spent almost two years roaming around in the vicinity of its geologically interesting landing site, collecting rock and sediment samples. This month, the Perseverance rover started dropping off the first of those samples at strategic locations on Mars, so they can be picked up by a future courier mission that will return them to Earth. We hear how this part of the mission has been going from University of Alberta's Chris Herd, a returned sample scientist with the mission.

A moving image showing the Perseverance rover drilling into red sand on Mars.
NASA’s Perseverance rover collects two samples of regolith – broken rock and dust – with a regolith sampling bit on the end of its robotic arm. One of those samples will remain in the belly of the rover, while the other has been dropped off on the surface of Mars to be collected later. (NASA/JPL-Caltech)

Farming fish lose their fertilizer to invasive rats

Jewel damselfish farm algae on coral reefs that surround tropical atolls, and their algae farms are fertilized by run-off from the islands that's historically been rich in guano from seabirds. But on many of these islands, invasive rats have devastated seabird populations, and the lack of literal trickle-down is leading to a change in farming for the unfortunate fish. Ecologist Rachel Gunn, recently at Lancaster University in the U.K., studied this unusual relationship between a terrestrial and a marine ecosystem. Her research was published in Nature.


How to fight an infodemic with cognitive vaccines

In the last few years, many officials have noted how we've suffered not one but two outbreaks. One was the biological epidemic of COVID-19, the other, an "infodemic" of political, medical and scientific misinformation. Now psychologists are testing whether we can fight misinformation the way we fight viruses — with inoculation. Sander van der Linden, a social psychologist from the University of Cambridge, tested this on Youtube. He found that by exposing people to the techniques used to create misinformation, they could produce intellectual antibodies to build resistance to it much like vaccines build resistance to disease. His study was published in the journal Science Advances.  

WATCH: Prebunking Manipulation Techniques - Ad Hominem Attacks