Message from @ᛋᛉKLOᚢ
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Memecenter.com watermark wtf this is so epic
@ᛋᛉKLOᚢ getting no route
im good
might be server location
hey buds
I dont have a mic
whats up
this the book
This is a good example of the behaviors I'm talking about WRT group predation in the animal kingdom:
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bombus_bohemicus#/search
Also, read the "Mafia Hypothesis" section of the brood parasitsim entry:
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brood_parasite
Also of note, the popular term 'cuck' is derived from observations of the behaviors of the victims of the 'cuckoo' bird's parasitic strategies.
The eggshells of brood parasites are often thicker than those of the hosts. For example, the eggs of cuckoos are about 23.2 millimetres (0.91 in) thicker than those the great reed warbler.[13] The function of this thick eggshell is debated. One hypothesis, the puncture resistance hypothesis, states that the thicker eggshells serve to prevent hosts from breaking the eggshell, thus killing the embryo inside. This is supported by a study in which marsh warblers damaged their eggs more often when attempting to break cuckoo eggs, but incurred less damage when trying to puncture great reed warbler eggs put in the nest by researchers. Another hypothesis is the laying damage hypothesis, which postulates that the eggshells are adapted to damage the eggs of the host when the former is being laid, and prevent the parasite's eggs from being damaged when the host lays its eggs.[14] In support of this hypothesis, eggs of the shiny cowbird parasitizing the house wren and the chalk-browed mockingbird and the brown-headed cowbird parasitizing the house wren and the red-winged blackbird damaged the host's eggs when dropped, and sustained little damage when host eggs where dropped on them.[15]