Re: Yes ...

Date: 2021-02-10 02:29 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
>>My first thought...<<

Whatever tech was being used would need to account for convection. Pizza paddle thingamajigs, anyone?

The food would also need to be in sufficient quantity, or have a sufficient calorie count to be worth the effort expended in processing. (And it would need to cook quickly too, but the smaller portions would help with that.)

I imagine if they had candles [probably more like primitive disaster-tuna-can candles than tapers], they could easily toast food-onna-stick.

>>A more serious limitation would be brain size. Sapient shrews might need to be communal rather than individual creatures for purposes of generating enough mindmass.<<

Total # of neurons affecting maximum computing power?

I know parrots are pretty smart, but maybe parrot/rat size is as small as it can go...

Communal living does have advantages; mostly various buffers against a harsh world, but also a greater pooling of resources.

Wouldn't it be hilarious if the most successful intelligences are the social weakling species-es, because the apes badasses never got past the Stone Age? :D

>>However, there are soft-bodied creatures,...<<

Or elephant's trunks. It's not impossible, but the switchover for an entire organ system would be complicated.

>>Freezing could work -- although it would probably work better at small frog than nano-frog sizes.<<

I was thinking tiny-but-still visible to human eyes. I couldn't think if how to do hydrokinetis / hielokinetics (?) with science...maybe different concentrations of antifreeze in the biofluids? Or a 'bone sack' organ that uses either antifreeze concentrations or pressure to form an individual bone as needed? (In that case, the skeletal system would be a series of bags, variously filled with fluid or filled with ice...)

And a rupture of a bone-sack could be very dangerous, if it mixed different chemical concentrations and made bones ossify in the wrong place...(sounds like a case for Sector General!)

Metabolism might be another challenge. Chemistry (at least standard biochemistry) is a lot less active at colder temps.

Re: Yes ...

Date: 2021-02-10 03:26 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
Apex, not apes.

Re: Yes ...

Date: 2021-02-10 06:16 pm (UTC)
acelightning: lighthouse powered by lightning striking it (lighthouse)
From: [personal profile] acelightning
What about jellyfish, and the structural properties of their tissues?

Re: Yes ...

Date: 2021-02-10 08:50 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
I know jellies have a hydroskeleton, and spiders actually use hydraulics* to extend their legs**. Both of those would use liquid water.
*think pressurizing a garden hose
**the legs contract with another mechanism (and that's why the legs curl when they dry out)

I think pufferfish would puff up with water as well. Plants are kind of hydroskeletal - they go limp when they dry out.

I guess hydroskeletons and musculoskeletons (?) are good for flexibiliy (and storing extra water), but the osseous/hard skeletons make better armor/weapons.

Re: Yes ...

Date: 2021-02-12 03:35 am (UTC)
acelightning: lighthouse powered by lightning striking it (lighthouse)
From: [personal profile] acelightning
According to Wikipedia, pufferfish puff by filling their stomachs with water.

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