Arctic Springtail Insect Winter Survival (November 28)
When winter comes, some animals hibernate while others migrate, but have you heard of the Arctic springtail’s method of surviving the winter? Arctic Springtails are tiny little insects less than 2/10th of an inch long. They spend their spring and summer living in the mossy areas of the Arctic. Once it starts becoming chilly, they start to darken in color and lose massive amounts of water until they shrivel up – looking like a dried, crumpled leaf. They spend the winter dehydrated and dormant. This is called cryoprotective dehydration and is also used by the Antarctic nematode and the Antarctic midge larvae. When the spring warmth returns, the Arctic springtail rehydrates itself and crawls away as if nothing happened.
Evolutionists believe that the springtails’ ability to dry out and later rehydrate themselves happened over millions of years. Yet, this simply cannot be true because the springtails, nematodes, and midge larvae all had to get it right the first time in order to survive the first brutal Arctic winter. God provided this unique hibernation ability from the very beginning.
Psalm 92:5a
KJV: O Lord, how great are thy works!
NIV: How great are your works, Lord,
Reference
Springtail dries out for winter: study shows genetic details of arthropod’s extreme survival
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