Mildly interesting
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On March 24, 2026, something happened in the deep taiga along the Tumen River that researchers have been hoping for — and quietly fearing might never come.
A satellite-collared Amur leopard, part of a population that has climbed to approximately 130 adults, crossed the Tumen River basin through heavy seasonal snowfall and emerged on the Chinese side. A 45-mile journey through some of the most demanding winter terrain on Earth, completed by an animal that once existed in numbers so low the species had almost no path forward.
The crossing confirmed something scientists had spent years trying to build and were not yet certain was working.
The transboundary "green bridge" between Russia's Primorsky Krai and China's Jilin Province — a carefully coordinated conservation corridor connecting habitat across two countries — is functioning. The Amur leopard is not just surviving inside its original 3,000 square kilometre core zone. It is moving beyond it. It is expanding. And for a species that once had only 25 survivors left in the 20th century, the word "expanding" carries a weight that is difficult to fully convey.
The Amur leopard remains critically endangered. That fact has not changed, and it would be a mistake to treat one crossing as a finished story. But what this movement confirms is that the anti-poaching operations and habitat restoration efforts carried out across both countries are beginning to provide what researchers call "genetic breathing room" — the space a population needs to avoid the inbreeding that was quietly accelerating the species toward extinction even as direct poaching was being controlled.
When only 25 individuals remain, every mating pair that shares too much genetic history makes the next generation slightly less viable. A corridor that allows animals to move between previously isolated populations changes that equation in ways no amount of protection alone can achieve.
Somewhere in the taiga on the Chinese side of the Tumen River, an Amur leopard is walking through snow that no Amur leopard has walked through in living memory. The green bridge held. The population is moving.
Share this because 25 survivors became 130 — and this crossing is proof that the number is still going in the right direction.#AmurLeopard #TumenRiver #LandOfTheLeopard #CriticallyEndangered #BigCatConservation

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It doesn't matter and it's not Catholic. I just don't want to wear contacts with spikes in them.
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Cut open an octopus... and what you find will rewrite everything you thought you knew about life. Three hearts — not one. Two pump blood exclusively to the gills. The third pushes it to the rest of the body. And that blood? It's blue. Copper-based. Running through a system so ancient, it predates dinosaurs by hundreds of millions of years. Its brain wraps entirely around its esophagus — meaning every single bite of food passes through the center of its mind. One wrong meal... and it damages its own intelligence. Hidden inside that mantle: a ink sac loaded with chemical weaponry, a funnel that jets water for instant escape, and a liver so complex it acts as both digestive organ and immune system simultaneously. This is not a simple sea creature. This is a living machine — engineered by evolution over 300 million years — into something so sophisticated, so alien, so perfect... that science is still struggling to fully understand it.
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the more you look into octopi
The proper plural of octopus is "octopuses."
Grok:
"Octopus" comes from Ancient Greek: oktṓ (ὀκτώ) = "eight"
pous (πούς) = "foot"In Greek, the proper plural is ὀκτάποδες (oktápodes). Some very formal scientific or classical contexts still use octopodes (pronounced ok-TOP-uh-deez), but it's extremely rare in everyday English.
English usually adds -es to nouns ending in -s (or -us). So octopuses follows standard English morphology. Dictionaries and major style guides overwhelmingly prefer it:Merriam-Webster, Oxford English Dictionary, AP Style, Chicago Manual of Style — all list octopuses as the primary (and preferred) plural.
"Octopi" is widely considered a hypercorrection (people trying to sound smart and getting it wrong).
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