![These Penguins Take 10,000 Little Naps A Day — Seconds At A Time - podcast episode cover](https://media.npr.org/assets/img/2023/11/30/gettyimages-515929390_sq-ef5fbf218a9e38501f11b804eda589352e316455.jpg?s=3000&c=66&f=jpg)
Episode description
Sleep. It's an essential biological function that has long intrigued scientists. Researchers have studied everything from mice to fruit flies in the lab to get a better understanding of what happens when animals sleep — and why so many do it. This week, scientists finally added one piece to the elusive sleep puzzle: How wild chinstrap penguins sleep amid their noisy colony. Turns out, they do it over 10,000 times in seconds-long bursts throughout the day — totaling 11 hours when all is said and done.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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