Researchers have found some lizards use bubbles attached to their noses as natural “oxygen tanks,” allowing them to spend one-quarter of an hour underwater hiding from predators. In a paper published in the latest edition of Current Biology, researchers from Binghamton University in New York and Canada’s Queen’s University said they found some semi-aquatic anole lizards have adapted to evade […]
The post Air Raising: How A Scuba Diving Lizard Uses A Bubble Of Air On Its Nose To Swim Underwater first appeared on The Florida Star | The Georgia Star.