News

Imagine coming home after a long day, seeking peace in the gentle dance of your aquarium fish only to notice something feels ...
When the bubble-bothered fish approach the Rappahannock, they will lose control of their swimming muscles.
Many folks in southern coastal areas know about strand feeding, the remarkable fish-catching behavior demonstrated by bottlenose dolphins. A pod of dolphins will corral a school of fish, propelling ...
Threshers are not named for the thrashing motion of their tail, as many assume. Instead, their name comes from a farming ...
Hovering fish aren’t loafing—they burn twice resting energy to make micro-fin tweaks that counteract a natural tendency to ...
Fish make hanging motionless in the water column look effortless, and scientists had long assumed hovering was a type of rest ...
Fish communicate using sound, but conservation laws often ignore their voices, acoustic habitats, and behaviors.
Opinion
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Commentary: Hooked on cruelty — Science proved fish suffer
Imagine you can’t breathe. Panic sparks through your body like an electric current. And every second hurts more than the last. That’s what death looks like for rainbow trout and countless other fish ...
A new study suggests fish may swim together in turbulent water to conserve energy.
Little Fish Swim Club and Torpedo emerged tops at the Nairobi County Swimming Association (NCSA) Inter Clubs Swimming championships held at Kiota School over the weekend.
Scientists used a baited camera to record deep-sea fish swimming backward, study said. First-of-its-kind video shows the escape mechanism.
Schooling helps reduce the risk of being attacked by predators, and also makes swimming easier because the fish position themselves so they are able to slipstream in their neighbours' wake.