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Discover the Sugar Hack for Fresh Breath

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Fight cavities)
Fri Mar 21 10:15:51 2025

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Date: Fri, 21 Mar 2025 15:15:32 +0100
From: "Fight cavities" <Fightcavities@foragerfoods.ru.com>
Reply-To: "Fight cavities" <Improvegumhealth@foragerfoods.ru.com>
Subject: Discover the Sugar Hack for Fresh Breath
To: <sipb-afsreq-mtg@charon.mit.edu>
Message-ID: <ohm3nz9otkokanjl-rkyz4h2ze11x2kxq-2c395-5176f@foragerfoods.ru.com>

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Discover the Sugar Hack for Fresh Breath

http://foragerfoods.ru.com/mp56uw5Om8eK0rvsiHEs10Ch_V2MAz3DfE8Jo1IcC4OhsJXBpw

http://foragerfoods.ru.com/4Z2pZZkVc6SOf5PHWJSUaOTGZyYV2mxWt5SYE7r7eBK6_oclHA

erica.

Pupation occurs in the soil in late May. Adults emerge from the soil in mid-late November. The female winter moths are flightless but release a sex pheromone to attract males. After mating, the female lays between 150 and 350 tiny eggs in bark crevices, on branches, in lichen, and under bark scales. With such a long pupal period, the winter moth is vulnerable to numerous pupal predators and parasitoids.

Research conducted in the Netherlands indicated that as climate warming is causing spring temperatures to become warmer sooner, some of the winter moth eggs were hatching before tree leaf buds – first food for the caterpillars – had begun to open. Early hatchlings starved. Late hatchlings survived. Because hatch timing is genetically controlled, the moths are evolving to resynchronize with bud opening by delaying the response to the temperature trigger by 5 to 10 days. The larvae, like the adults, can withstand below freezing temperatures at night. Larval dispersal is the dominant source of density-dependent larval mortality and likely regulates high density population dynamics of winter moth in New England. Larvae prefer oak and apple, but also feed on maple, birch, hornbeam, chestnut, hazel, quince, beech, larch, poplar, cherry, pear, rose, raspberry, blueb

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<body><a href="http://foragerfoods.ru.com/Iz9w2v83C6qxw9B-HvwsP-ooYtTDwBib8QFlp8r7Wh3NvMlSsw"><img src="http://foragerfoods.ru.com/1e0fb501866324e22e.jpg" /><img height="1" src="http://www.foragerfoods.ru.com/6QCXCAbASL4QL0ofXLdpY77cxAo7H1XPnOnoEfWI_ldw4m5EcA" width="1" /></a>
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			<div style="font-size:18px;font-family:'Roboto','Roboto','Oxygen','Ubuntu','Cantarell','Fira Sans','Droid Sans','Helvetica Neue',sans-serif;width:600px;padding:10px;">Have you heard about the &quot;sugar hack?&quot;<br />
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			It&#39;s a brand new, 100% natural oral health remedy that is shocking dentists and medical researchers around the world.<br />
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			While reversing gum disease and giving you &quot;strong as steel&quot; teeth for years or decades to come:<br />
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			<a href="http://foragerfoods.ru.com/mp56uw5Om8eK0rvsiHEs10Ch_V2MAz3DfE8Jo1IcC4OhsJXBpw" target="blank"><b>&gt;&gt; Go Here Now &amp; Discover The Sugar Hack (Use This Today)</b></a><br />
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			<div style="color:#FFFFFF;font-size:10px;">erica. Pupation occurs in the soil in late May. Adults emerge from the soil in mid-late November. The female winter moths are flightless but release a sex pheromone to attract males. After mating, the female lays between 150 and 350 tiny eggs in bark crevices, on branches, in lichen, and under bark scales. With such a long pupal period, the winter moth is vulnerable to numerous pupal predators and parasitoids. Research conducted in the Netherlands indicated that as climate warming is causing spring temperatures to become warmer sooner, some of the winter moth eggs were hatching before tree leaf buds &ndash; first food for the caterpillars &ndash; had begun to open. Early hatchlings starved. Late hatchlings survived. Because hatch timing is genetically controlled, the moths are evolving to resynchronize with bud opening by delaying the response to the temperature trigger by 5 to 10 days. The larvae, like the adults, can withstand below freezing temperatures at night. Larval dispersal is the dominant source of density-dependent larval mortality and likely regulates high density population dynamics of winter moth in New England. Larvae prefer oak and apple, but also feed on maple, birch, hornbeam, chestnut, hazel, quince, beech, larch, poplar, cherry, pear, rose, raspberry, blueb</div>
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