The Cool Down on MSN
Blind cave fish beneath 3 southern states may have upended Darwin's view of evolution underground
As the creator put it, a "hidden highway" appeared — a network of subsurface waterways that may have allowed the fish to ...
Fish stranded on shore often look helpless, all flops and wriggles. But that clumsy scramble may follow a surprisingly ...
Along the murky bottom of the Amazon River, serpentine fish called electric eels scour the gloom for unwary frogs or other small prey. When one swims by, the fish unleash two 600-volt pulses of ...
Reef fish evolved the ability to feed by biting prey from surfaces relatively recently, a UC Davis study shows. The innovation has driven an explosion of evolution in reef fish. Image shows a rainbow ...
A new study of the freshwater greenfin darter fish suggests river erosion can be a driver of biodiversity in tectonically inactive regions. New findings could explain biodiversity hotspots in ...
Why are there so many of species of coral reef fish? According to a new study, it’s because about 50 million years ago, some fish figured out how to bite food from hard surfaces. Evolution doesn’t ...
A remarkable fish species, the Amazon molly, has defied evolutionary norms by surviving for 100,000 years without males.
What scientists called one cavefish turned out to be three. A new cavefish species had been evolving in isolation for eight ...
Learn more about Qreiya 3 Lagerstätte, a fossil-rich site that could help fill key gaps in marine evolution.
When you think about human evolution, there’s a good chance you’re imagining chimpanzees exploring ancient forests or early humans daubing woolly mammoths on to cave walls. But we humans, along with ...
The snipe eel (right) and anglerfish illustrate the extremes of body shapes in deep ocean fishes. (Images from Scripps Institute of Oceanography via Oceana.org) The deep ocean is home to many strange ...
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