Okay, so I was an easily amused child. I admit it.
They usually came in a little clear plastic boxes with f
four or five beans in them. They are
about the size of a kernel of corn or a small bean. Picture a little bean that moves a fraction
of an inch every 15 seconds or so . . . pretty exciting stuff, huh? That's
about as exciting as jumping beans get.
It wasn’t until I found out what they really were . . . and what mad them jump . . . that they became less cool. WAY less cool. Icky even.
The thing that makes these beans jump is a tiny moth
larvae that lives inside the bean. The moth lays its eggs in the flower of
the plant, and the eggs are incorporated into the seeds. The larvae then eat
out the interior of the bean and live there. When the larvae move, so does the
bean. Eventually, the larvae turn into moths that emerge from the beans to
repeat the cycle. Unless, of course,
their stuck in a little airless plastic box . . . then they just
suffocate.
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