Robot Dinosaur Flaps Feathers to Scare Prey

A robot dinosaur wearing a bellboy hat welcomes guests from the front desk at the Henn-na Hotel in Urayasu, suburban Tokyo on August 31, 2018. (AFP/Kazuhiro Nogi)
A robot dinosaur wearing a bellboy hat welcomes guests from the front desk at the Henn-na Hotel in Urayasu, suburban Tokyo on August 31, 2018. (AFP/Kazuhiro Nogi)
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Robot Dinosaur Flaps Feathers to Scare Prey

A robot dinosaur wearing a bellboy hat welcomes guests from the front desk at the Henn-na Hotel in Urayasu, suburban Tokyo on August 31, 2018. (AFP/Kazuhiro Nogi)
A robot dinosaur wearing a bellboy hat welcomes guests from the front desk at the Henn-na Hotel in Urayasu, suburban Tokyo on August 31, 2018. (AFP/Kazuhiro Nogi)

Against a backdrop of looming skyscrapers, a robot dinosaur raises its feathery wings, sending its prey fleeing in terror. It is a scientific invention to show how some dinosaurs could have flapped primitive wings to scare their quarry out of hiding, similar to birds like the roadrunner.

In this case, the robo-dino's prey is a grasshopper, which responds by springing into a shrub. The interaction was shown in a video released alongside a study by researchers in Seoul, South Korea. The findings were published in the journal Nature and reported by AFP.

Dinosaurs were long thought to be the relatives of reptiles, but over the last three decades, dinosaur fossils have been discovered with feathers, leading scientists to believe they are instead the ancestors of birds.

Many of these feathered dinosaurs could not fly, so a number of theories have been put forth, including that the feathers insulated the dinosaurs against the cold, or maybe they allowed dinosaurs to move more quickly.

Some small dinosaurs may have even used their wings to knock down and trap their prey, said Piotr Jablonski, a senior author of the study.

The team of researchers proposed adding a new predatory trick to this list, which they called the "flush-pursue strategy", a method used by the passerine and the northern mockingbird that flap their wings to prompt prey to reveal its location.

To demonstrate their hypothesis, the team built a robot version of the flightless dinosaur Caudipteryx, a peacock-sized pennaraptor that lived 124 million years ago.

The metal robot -- dubbed the "Robopteryx" -- was tasked with flapping its wings to scare-up some grasshoppers, whose ancestors lived in the same period as the Caudipteryx.

"The grasshoppers more frequently escaped when the dinosaur displayed its proto-wings," said lead study author Jinseok Park.

The grasshoppers were also more likely to hop away when the robot's wings were painted with contrasting black and white patches, which was proved after testing the neural response of the grasshoppers and how the contrasting-color wings, scared them and triggered their escape reflex.



King Charles Warns of War’s ‘True Cost’ at VJ Day’s 80th Anniversary

 Britain's King Charles records a VJ Day message in the Morning Room of Clarence House, in London Britain, August 14, 2025. (Reuters)
Britain's King Charles records a VJ Day message in the Morning Room of Clarence House, in London Britain, August 14, 2025. (Reuters)
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King Charles Warns of War’s ‘True Cost’ at VJ Day’s 80th Anniversary

 Britain's King Charles records a VJ Day message in the Morning Room of Clarence House, in London Britain, August 14, 2025. (Reuters)
Britain's King Charles records a VJ Day message in the Morning Room of Clarence House, in London Britain, August 14, 2025. (Reuters)

Britain's King Charles on Friday released a message commemorating the 80th anniversary of VJ Day, which marks the Allied victory over Japan and the end of World War Two, reflecting on current conflicts and warning that the cost of war reaches far beyond battlefields.

While fighting in Europe ended in May 1945, the conflict with Japan continued until it signaled its intention to surrender on August 15 that year after atomic bombs were dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki by the United States.

Charles said the war's final act brought an "immense price" for Hiroshima and Nagasaki, one he prayed no nation would ever pay again.

Charles will be joined by his wife Queen Camilla, British Prime Minister Keir Starmer, the Japanese ambassador and veterans for a National Service of Remembrance to pay tribute to those who were killed in the last three months of the war.

There will be a flypast featuring historic military planes, a two-minute silence at midday and famous buildings across the country will be lit up to mark the occasion.

The monarch used his six-minute address to highlight ongoing conflicts: "War's true cost extends beyond battlefields, touching every aspect of life, a tragedy all too vividly demonstrated by conflicts around the world today."

He said that in World War Two, nations that had never fought side by side learned to work together, proving "that in times of war and in times of peace, the greatest weapons of all are not the arms you bear, but the arms you link".

"That remains a vital lesson for our times," he added.

Starmer said in a statement the "country owes a great debt to those who fought for a better future, so we could have the freedoms and the life we enjoy today".

At dawn military bagpipers performed at The Cenotaph war memorial in central London, at Edinburgh Castle and the National Memorial Arboretum in central England where the service of remembrance will be held later, the government said.

A piper was also expected to perform at a Japanese peace garden to recognize the reconciliation between Britain and Japan in the decades since the war ended.

On Friday evening, dozens of buildings and locations across the country including Buckingham Palace, the Houses of Parliament, the Tower of London, and the White Cliffs of Dover will be illuminated to mark the anniversary.