jumping bean - significado y definición. Qué es jumping bean
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Qué (quién) es jumping bean - definición

SEED PODS INHABITED BY A MOTH LARVA, KNOWN FOR "JUMPING" WHEN HEATED
Jumping beans; Mexican jumping beans; Jumping bean; Brincadores; Mexican Jumping Bean; Frijoles saltarines; Brincador; Semillas brincadores
  • Jumping beans, each about 7 to 10 mm
  • The "trap door" of the jumping bean on the left has been removed, while the one on the right remains attached. Also shown are two moth larvae and their pupal casings.
  • Mexican jumping beans
  • left

jumping bean         
WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
Jumping beans; Mexican jumping beans; Jumping bean; Brincadores; Mexican Jumping Bean; Frijoles saltarines; Brincador; Semillas brincadores
¦ noun a plant seed, chiefly Mexican, that jumps due to the movement of a moth larva developing inside it.
Mexican jumping bean         
Mexican jumping beans (also known as in Spanish) are seed pods that have been inhabited by the larva of a small moth (Cydia saltitans) and are native to Mexico. The "bean" is usually tan to brown.
Bean harvester         
  • A Ploeger bean harvester (fitted with a spinach header)
HARVESTING MACHINE
Bean combine; Bean thresher
A bean harvester, also known as a bean thresher or bean combine, is a threshing machine which is used to harvest beans. It mainly consists of a pickup, several beaters, shakers, one or several fans, elevators, conveyor belts, a storage bin, and usually a spreader at the rear.

Wikipedia

Mexican jumping bean

Mexican jumping beans (also known as frijoles saltarines in Spanish) are seed pods that have been inhabited by the larva of a small moth (Cydia saltitans) and are native to Mexico. The "bean" is usually tan to brown. They are from the shrub Sebastiania pavoniana, often also referred to as "jumping bean". However, they are not related to actual beans (legume plants), but rather to spurges. The beans are considered non-toxic but are not generally eaten. In the spring, when the shrub is flowering, moths lay their eggs on the shrub’s hanging seedpods. When the eggs hatch, tiny larvae bore into the immature green pods and begin to devour the seeds. The pods ripen, fall to the ground and separate into three smaller segments, and those segments are called Mexican jumping beans. As the tiny larvae inside curl up and uncurl, they hit the capsule’s wall with their heads – and the bean jumps. It’s been observed that they move more as temperatures rise, the larva eats away the inside of the bean (until it becomes hollow) and attaches itself to the inside of the bean with silk-like thread.

Physicists at Seattle University theorize, using Brownian motion as a model, that the larvae's random walk helps to find shade to survive on hot days. Although it does not optimize for finding shade quickly, the strategy minimizes the chances of never finding shade when shade is sparse.

The larva may live for months inside the bean with varying periods of dormancy. If the larva has adequate conditions of moisture and temperature, it will live long enough to go into a pupal stage. In the spring, the moth forces itself out of the bean through a round "trap door", leaving behind the pupal casing. After its metamorphosis, the small, silver and gray-colored moth lives for no more than a few days.

Ejemplos de uso de jumping bean
1. Bob Stanley introduces Made (on February 21) and Jumping Bean Bag (on February 28) at the Barbican, London EC2.
2. With no myths to shatter, no half–baked philosophies, Jumping Bean Bag takes pop‘s manic thrill down to its essence.
3. Jumping Bean Bag tells the story of Slag Bag, a band formed at public school, who play souped–up glam rock – a smidgeon of Roxy, a dab of Yes, plenty of Spiders From Mars – while wearing Woolworth‘s Martian fancy dress.
4. They both starred in Jumping Bean Bag, a Play for Today given just one screening on BBC1 in February 1'76, and a fake rock doc that ticks every box.
5. From an unsuccessful gig in a church hall ("You puddings!" shouts Freemantle at the unimpressed audience of seven) to a triumphant gig at Chiswick Empire where one fan literally screams herself to death, Jumping Bean Bag is unrelenting in its mixture of unintentional hilarity and genuinely great songs, written by one Stephen Deutsch, now a lecturer in Bournemouth.