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New Study Finds Warmer Temperatures May Lead to Longer Limbs

Discover how warmer temperatures lead to long legs, enhancing cartilage growth and affecting biological mechanisms in animals.

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If you want to be leggier, consider moving to Florida. It might even work if your parents have average-sized limbs. New research has found that DNA isn't the only route to long legs: Warmer temperatures can also lead to longer limbs by helping cartilage grow, at least in mice. Researchers raised baby mice in cold (45F), normal (70F), or warm (81F) temperatures for about two months. The mice raised in warmer temperatures grew longer tibias and femurs (leg bones), and metatarsals ("toes"). The researchers say the effect may be partly explained by increased blood flow under warmer conditions, which promote growth of the cartilage capping the ends of long bones. However, this doesn't fully explain the results, and they believe temperature also affects other biological mechanisms, like the expression of proteins. People have long observed that animals, including humans, seem to take on different sizes and shapes depending on the ...

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