When you think of Atlantic cod, you probably think of a strip of fish, battered and fried. But new research suggests that the fish might be able to use tools, and that might cause us to rethink how we ...
The study logs fish deliberately picking up hard-shelled prey like crabs and mollusks, smashing them against hard surfaces like rocks to access the meal inside. "Tool use is typically associated with ...
In this frame from the video, an orange-dotted tuskfish carries a clam in its mouth. See video below. The first video of tool use by a fish has been published in the journal Coral Reefs by Giacomo ...
And now, ladies and gentlemen, a fish smashing a clamshell against a rock… After a few thrashes, the fish makes off with the now-unprotected claim meat. This is significant because, according to ...
When marine biologist Scott Gardner was swimming back to his boat after a dive on the Great Barrier Reef, he heard a strange cracking sound and grabbed his camera — just in time to snap some photos of ...
This blackspot tuskfish, found in Australia’s Great Barrier Reef, held a clam in its mouth and smashed it against a rock to reach the food inside. This photo is the first incontrovertible proof that ...
MINNEAPOLIS -- Orangutans swim about as well as they fly, but research on three Indonesian islands shows that these long-limbed apes nonetheless catch and eat fish ...
A blackspot tuskfish (Choerodon schoenleinii) has been photographed picking up a clam in its mouth, swimming over to a rock, and then using the rock as an anvil by smashing the clam against it until ...
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