enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Mudskipper - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mudskipper

    The ability to breathe through their skin is associated with increased capillary density in their skin. [12] This mode of breathing, similar to that employed by amphibians, is known as cutaneous respiration. [6] Another important adaptation that aids breathing while out of water is their enlarged gill chambers, where they retain a bubble of air.

  3. Amphibious fish - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amphibious_fish

    Mudskippers are found in mangrove swamps in Africa and the Indo-Pacific; they frequently come onto land, and can survive in air for up to 3-1/2 days. [5] Mudskippers breathe through their skin and through the lining of the mouth (the mucosa) and throat (the pharynx). This requires the mudskipper to be wet, limiting them to humid habitats.

  4. Giant mudskipper - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Giant_mudskipper

    Like other mudskippers, the giant mudskipper can breathe air. To do so, it will gulp air, which allows oxygen to easily diffuse into its bloodstream because of its highly vascularized buccal surfaces. While gulping air, it may also move its operculum while submerged to trap water within the gills. [17]

  5. Oxudercidae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oxudercidae

    The Oxudercidae includes 86 genera, which contain around 600 species. This family has many species which occur in fresh water, and a number of species found on wet beaches and are able to live for a number of days out of water. The family includes the mudskippers, which include species that are able to move over land quite quickly. They have ...

  6. Walking fish - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Walking_fish

    Able to spend longer times out of water, these fish may use a number of means of locomotion, including springing, snake-like lateral undulation, and tripod-like walking. The mudskippers are probably the best land-adapted of contemporary fish and are able to spend days moving about out of water and can even climb mangroves , although to only ...

  7. Boleophthalmus pectinirostris - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boleophthalmus_pectinirostris

    Boleophthalmus pectinirostris, commonly known as the great blue spotted mudskipper, is a species of mudskipper native to the north-western Pacific Ocean. It can be found on the coastlines of Japan , eastern China , Sumatra , Malaysia , Taiwan and the Korean Peninsula .

  8. A weird sea creature was anatomically unlike anything ever ...

    www.aol.com/news/weird-sea-creature-anatomically...

    An important part of recognizing the structure as a nerve cord was fossilized nervous systems in other animals from the Cambrian Period (541 million to 485.4 million years ago) that were ...

  9. Boleophthalmus boddarti - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boleophthalmus_boddarti

    Similarly to other mudskippers, B. boddarti has moist skin with capillaries near the surface in dermal bulges that allow it to perform cutaneous respiration, although it has been observed to have less mucus-secreting cells than more terrestrial species of mudskipper such as Periophthalmus variabilis, on account of it living primarily in aquatic ...