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Anonymous
i had to do some made up experiment that involves isopod size and conglobulation duration. At first I didn't think there was going to be a pattern, but then after i got the results, averaged out the times for small isopods vs large isopods, and after a series of t-tests, i found that there is a relationship. now i need to find some journal article that relates these two traits. Can someone help? I've been searching for 4 hours now and I havent found a single article discussing conglobation duration based on size.

Im working with Armadillidium Vulgare, but I just need any journal article that talks about any animal that uses conglobulation as a defense mechanism, and its size as a deciding factor in how long it stays rolled up.
>> Frankengun !HgIdo42VU2
ROLLY POLLY! Omg coolest beetle/worm/bug/thing EVAR.
>> Anonymous
I DID A EXPERIMENT ONCE WHERE I PUT PILL BUGS ON A PAN WITH DAMP PAPER TOWEL ONE ONE SIDE AND DRY ON THE OTHER. THEY SEEMED TO GO ON THE DAMP ONE MORE.
>> Anonymous
>>254815
Your lab manual is by Morgan and Carter isn't it...having fun?
>> Anonymous
>>254815
Holy fuckballs. That's some crazy shit right there.
>> Anonymous
>>254805

get back to /k/!
>> Frankengun !HgIdo42VU2
>>254841
No, i like it here.

It's fuzzy and bloody all at once.

Like a squirrel carcass.
>> Anonymous
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If there is such an article, it is probably buried deep within the archives of science journals like Nature magazine. That is a really specific and arbitrary relationship you were studying, so I wouldn't be surprised if there isn't any article on it.
Congratulations, you're the first?

Maybe you should have looked for an interesting article first, then duplicated the experiment by looking at the materials and methods.

What was the relationship, anyway?