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  2. Animal navigation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Animal_navigation

    Many marine animals such as seals are capable of hydrodynamic reception, enabling them to track and catch prey such as fish by sensing the disturbances their passage leaves behind in the water. [36] Marine mammals such as dolphins, [ 37 ] and many species of bat, [ 6 ] are capable of echolocation , which they use both for detecting prey and for ...

  3. Hydrodynamic reception - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hydrodynamic_reception

    Arthropods like these northern prawn, and some mammals, detect water movement with sensory hairs such as whiskers, bristles or antennae. In animal physiology, hydrodynamic reception refers to the ability of some animals to sense water movements generated by biotic (conspecifics, predators, or prey) or abiotic sources.

  4. Stomiidae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stomiidae

    Dragonfish are a type of teleost fish that inhabit the deep sea and use bioluminescence to detect prey and communicate with potential mates. They possess far-red emitting photophores and rhodopsins that are sensitive to long-wave emissions greater than 650 nm, and have adapted to the unique light conditions of the deep-sea environment. [13]

  5. Communication in aquatic animals - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Communication_in_aquatic...

    As water is a much better electrical conductor than air, electrocommunication is only observed in aquatic animals. There are various animals that can detect electrical signals, but fish are the only aquatic animals that can both send and receive EOD, making them the only animals to effectively communicate using electrical signals.

  6. Surface wave detection by animals - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Surface_wave_detection_by...

    Most research on the detection of surface waves has been done on the striped panchax, Aplocheilus lineatus. Surface wave detection by animals is the process by which animals, such as surface-feeding fish are able to sense and localize prey and other objects on the surface of a body of water by analyzing features of the ripples generated by objects' movement at the surface.

  7. Aquatic locomotion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aquatic_locomotion

    Jet propulsion is a method of aquatic locomotion where animals fill a muscular cavity and squirt out water to propel them in the opposite direction of the squirting water. Most organisms are equipped with one of two designs for jet propulsion; they can draw water from the rear and expel it from the rear, such as jellyfish, or draw water from ...

  8. ‘Large’ sea creature breathes with its legs, sucks prey with ...

    www.aol.com/large-sea-creature-breathes-legs...

    Photos show the animal’s claws, including the bristles that cover its immovable finger. The tips of the creature’s claws are “blackened.” The spider’s claws are covered in small bristles.

  9. Electroreception and electrogenesis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electroreception_and...

    An electric fish generates an electric field using an electric organ, modified from muscles in its tail. The field is called weak if it is only enough to detect prey, and strong if it is powerful enough to stun or kill. The field may be in brief pulses, as in the elephantfishes, or a continuous wave, as in the knifefishes.