I collect tales of parasites the way some people collect Star Trek plates. And having filled an entire book with them, I thought I had pretty much collected the whole set. But until now I had somehow missed the gruesome glory that is a wasp named Ampulex compressa.

As an adult, Ampulex compressa seems like your normal wasp, buzzing about and mating. But things get weird when it’s time for a female to lay an egg. She finds a cockroach to make her egg’s host, and proceeds to deliver two precise stings.

Continue reading “The Wisdom of Parasites”

The New York Times, January 26, 2006

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NEW YORK — Scientists at the American Museum of Natural History have discovered a fossil in New Mexico that looks like a six-foot-long, two-legged dinosaur similar to a tyrannosaur or a velociraptor. But it is actually an ancient relative of modern alligators and crocodiles.

The discovery is a striking example of how completely different categories of animals can evolve the same kind of body over and over again.

For almost 60 years, the 210-million-year-old fossil had been hiding in plain sight. It was lodged in a slab of rock dug up in 1947 in New Mexico by a team led by Dr. Edward Colbert, a paleontologist at the natural history museum.

Continue reading “Crocodile fossil shows uncanny convergence”

The New York Times, January 26, 2006

Link

Scientists at the American Museum of Natural History have discovered a fossil in New Mexico that looks like a six-foot-long, two-legged dinosaur along the lines of a tyrannosaur or a velociraptor. But it is actually an ancient relative of today’s alligators and crocodiles.

The discovery is a striking example of how different animals can evolve the same kind of body over and over again.

For almost 60 years, the 210-million-year-old fossil has been hiding in plain sight. It was lodged in a slab of rock dug up in 1947 in New Mexico by a team led by Edward Colbert, a paleontologist at the museum.

Continue reading “Fossil Yields Surprise Kin of Crocodiles”