News

Scuba-diving lizards have an aquatic trick up their sleeves: They can create air bubbles on their foreheads to breathe underwater, enabling them to stay submerged for long periods and escape ...
“We know that they can stay underwater for a really long time, that they’re pulling oxygen from this bubble of air,” said Swierk. Also Read: 26,000-year-old human, animal footprints ...
Lindsey Swierk Various species of aquatic insects, such as the predaceous diving beetle, use bubbles for breathing underwater. Now, in a first-of-its-kind discovery, biologists have found that ...
For humans, living in a bubble is a figurative coping mechanism. For water anoles, it is a literal description of an underwater survival strategy. The semi-aquatic lizards found in Costa Rica’s ...
Watch a slow-motion video of a star-nosed mole sniffing an underwater scent trail through a wire mesh using air bubbles, here (mp4 format). The five star-nosed moles followed the underwater scent ...