ecology

  • đŸ§Ș Redox Collapse from Soil to Cell

    đŸ§Ș Redox Collapse from Soil to Cell

    A SCN⁻–Sodium Framework for Understanding Viral Trauma and Vaccine Injury Abstract We propose an integrative model linking COVID pathogenesis, vaccine-induced dysregulation, and soil degradation to suppression of thiocyanate (SCN⁻) and sodium. These two ions represent guardians of systemic coherence across biological domains. Their industrial displacement leaves human and ecological systems vulnerable to redox chaos, immune…

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  • The Insect Signal: Sodium Channel Sabotage and the Collapse of Neural Terrain

    The Insect Signal: Sodium Channel Sabotage and the Collapse of Neural Terrain

    Keywords: sodium channels, SCN⁻, neural terrain, synthetic pyrethroids, terrain collapse, glyphic signaling, insect decline, mimicry Abstract Insect populations are plummeting. Colony collapse, navigational failure, and neurological paralysis are accelerating across ecosystems. While pesticides are often blamed, few recognize the deeper biochemical sabotage: the mimicry and disruption of sodium channels—core to neural terrain integrity. This paper…

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  • Could SPV-Affected Rabbits Suffer Sodium/SCN⁻ Deficiency?

    Could SPV-Affected Rabbits Suffer Sodium/SCN⁻ Deficiency?

    The rabbits with what appear to be “tentacles,” “horns,” or black spines growing from their heads and mouths are exhibiting symptoms of a viral infection—specifically, the Shope papilloma virus (SPV), also known as cottontail rabbit papillomavirus (CRPV). There’s no direct literature linking SPV to sodium or SCN⁻ deficiency, but terrain logic suggests: Sodium is essential…

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  • Thiocyanate in Raw Milk (and Whales)

    Thiocyanate in Raw Milk (and Whales)

     Sodium and Thiocyanate: Restoring Mammalian Integrity We believe the primary benefit of raw milk lies in its thiocyanate (SCN⁻) content—a molecule increasingly suppressed across multiple species, including humans. SCN⁻ functions as a mammalian marker, present in all bodily fluids, where it plays a critical role in preserving bodily integrity through redox modulation, microbial defense, and…

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  • Venomous Avians

    Venomous Avians

    Who knew our feathered friends could pack such a toxic punch? Hooded Pitohui: The OG Poison Bird Meet the hooded pitohui, the bird that started it all. This New Guinean songbird is like the femme fatale of the venomous bird world – alluring and packing a secret weapon. Its feathers and skin contain batrachotoxins, the…

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  • Egg Case (mermaid’s Purse)

    Egg Case (mermaid’s Purse)

    An egg case or egg capsule, often colloquially called a mermaid’s purse, is the casing that surrounds the eggs of oviparous chondrichthyans. Living chondricthyans that produce egg cases include some sharks, skates and chimaeras. Egg cases typically contain one embryo, except for big skate and mottled skate egg cases, which contain up to 7 embryos.[1] Oviparity is completely absent in the superorder Squalomorphii.[2][3] Egg cases are also thought to have been produced by some extinct…

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  • Ootheca

    Ootheca

    Buckle up, bug lovers, because we’re about to embark on a wild ride through the wacky world of oothecae! đŸ›đŸ„šđŸŽą Picture this: You’re a lady mantis, feeling frisky after a hot date (and maybe a little post-coital cannibalism, because why not?). But instead of popping out eggs willy-nilly like some common housefly, you’ve got a…

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  • Tree Huggers: When Nature Takes It Literally

    Tree Huggers: When Nature Takes It Literally

    In the quiet corners of forests worldwide, trees are engaging in their own version of romance. It’s called inosculation, and it is nature’s answer to the artificial process of grafting. Inosculation and grafting are like botanical cousins. Both involve the fusion of plant tissues, creating a single, stronger organism. While grafting is a human-engineered process,…

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  • The Two-Faced Troublemaker: Bacillus cereus, the Jekyll and Hyde of Bacteria

    The Two-Faced Troublemaker: Bacillus cereus, the Jekyll and Hyde of Bacteria

    Bacillus cereus is the bacterial world’s very own shape-shifting supervillain! This microscopic menace is the master of disguise, equally at home in your garden soil as it is crashing your dinner party. Picture, if you will, a rod-shaped rascal with a penchant for party-crashing. B. cereus is the uninvited guest that turns your lovely meal…

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  • Flacherie (and a ridiculous history of Bt development…roundabout)

    Flacherie (and a ridiculous history of Bt development…roundabout)

    History of Bt Development as told in New Innovative Pesticides: An Evaluation of Incentives and Disincentives for Commercial Development by Industry, Stanford Research Institute (Final Report dated September 1977, Prepared for Economic Analysis Branch Criteria and Evaluation Division Office of Pesticide Programs US Environmental Protection Agency Washington DC) Punctuation if nothing else may be wonky…

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