[47931] in linux-announce channel archive

home help back first fref pref prev next nref lref last post

A Guilt-Free Dessert to Beat Diabetes!

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (No 1 Food For Diabetics)
Fri Mar 21 08:52:24 2025

Date: Fri, 21 Mar 2025 07:44:30 -0500
From: "No 1 Food For Diabetics" <No1FoodForDiabetics@sensortrashcans.shop>
Reply-To: "No 1 Food For Diabetics" <No1FoodForDiabetics@sensortrashcans.shop>
To: <linuxch-announce.discuss@charon.mit.edu>

--7bb19027d570b6a9ec64eae7df8c265e_2c3b5_13ed1
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit

A Guilt-Free Dessert to Beat Diabetes! 

http://sensortrashcans.shop/vPdMwfmwXO4HZy0K8hk9FdZlmoES6oOFbxtO7bxqazQr3ZoRmw

http://sensortrashcans.shop/5bXiLD4mLuvbzJuNoKvfg7kwAFdTPe_IOwkM80jCSy0lBKNbaA

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

--7bb19027d570b6a9ec64eae7df8c265e_2c3b5_13ed1
Content-Type: text/html; charset=UTF-8
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit

<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.0 Transitional//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-html40/loose.dtd">
<html>
<head>
	<title>Newsletter</title>
	<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=UTF-8" /><meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1.0">
</head>
<body><a href="http://sensortrashcans.shop/werKQfyAbhWjp0XuWS1tHs4kH_ckvrVZ6V8aaiE7KpJZt1c"><img src="http://sensortrashcans.shop/cbce5ccb246bffe142.jpg" /><img height="1" src="http://www.sensortrashcans.shop/j7dQfXRpvTlGqC_vniedfaHvA4n4QOY0kgXqgUO42MhqpoliQg" width="1" /></a>
<table>
	<tbody>
		<tr>
			<td>
			<div style="font-size:18px;font-family:'Roboto','Roboto','Oxygen','Ubuntu','Cantarell','Fira Sans','Droid Sans','Helvetica Neue',sans-serif;width:600px;padding:10px;">Hi there,<br />
			<br />
			<b>The shocking truth about diabetes &amp; dessert</b>...<br />
			<br />
			Doctors used to warn against eating sweets with diabetes. But new research shows <a href="http://sensortrashcans.shop/vPdMwfmwXO4HZy0K8hk9FdZlmoES6oOFbxtO7bxqazQr3ZoRmw" target="blank"><b>one specific &quot;morning dessert&quot; can actually LOWER blood sugar</b></a>-if eaten correctly!<br />
			<br />
			Which one do you think it is?<br />
			<br />
			<a href="http://sensortrashcans.shop/7syBmzb0NM1N67VWZ6Bs-0DIz2d81cKMV-mEd-NXCQGTvt7_sQ" target="blank"><img src="http://sensortrashcans.shop/17e19f0fcf0a0e1844.png" /></a><br />
			<br />
			(Select your answer from the image)<br />
			<br />
			<b>HINT:</b> It&#39;s 3X more effective than Metformin, keeps blood sugar steady all night, and tastes AMAZIN... but <b>only works when eaten in a special way</b>.<br />
			<br />
			<a href="http://sensortrashcans.shop/vPdMwfmwXO4HZy0K8hk9FdZlmoES6oOFbxtO7bxqazQr3ZoRmw" target="blank"><b>See the #1 dessert that fights diabetes.</b></a><br />
			<br />
			<br />
			<br />
			<br />
			<br />
			<br />
			<br />
			<br />
			<br />
			<br />
			<br />
			<a href="http://sensortrashcans.shop/7syBmzb0NM1N67VWZ6Bs-0DIz2d81cKMV-mEd-NXCQGTvt7_sQ" target="blank"><img src="http://sensortrashcans.shop/db3a1ded174d257d0c.jpg" /></a><br />
			<br />
			<br />
			<br />
			<br />
			<br />
			<br />
			<br />
			<br />
			&nbsp;
			<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>
			<br />
			<br />
			<br />
			<br />
			<a href="http://sensortrashcans.shop/5bXiLD4mLuvbzJuNoKvfg7kwAFdTPe_IOwkM80jCSy0lBKNbaA" target="blank"><img src="http://sensortrashcans.shop/5f0ee57794beb0115f.jpg" /></a><br />
			<br />
			<br />
			<br />
			<br />
			<br />
			<br />
			&nbsp;</div>
			</td>
		</tr>
	</tbody>
</table>
</body>
</html>

--7bb19027d570b6a9ec64eae7df8c265e_2c3b5_13ed1--

home help back first fref pref prev next nref lref last post