24d
ZME Science on MSNFrom the vault: Why bats don’t fly in the rainOn rainy nights, the sky belongs to the raindrops. Birds have settled in, insects hide, and bats—nature’s only furry flying mammals—disappear. Why do bats avoid the rain? Is it because raindrops ...
9d
Laughing Squid on MSNThe Intelligent Biology That Lets Insects Fly in the RainDr. Joe Hanson explains how insects can fly in the rain due to their super hydrophobic wings that are impervious to water.
Imagine the scale of raindrops if you were the size of a small bird. Or mosquito. Flying through a drizzle should be deadly!
This Anna’s hummingbird shakes off rain as a wet dog does ... To test this, she needs the bird to fly the length of the tunnel, which he is stubbornly refusing to do. Suddenly he lets out ...
The overachieving Wallace's flying frog wasn't content to just hop and swim. Thousands of years of watching birds navigate the rain forest and avoid predators by taking to the sky appears to have ...
Read full article: Testimony begins in murder trial for Swan Boat Club crash High temperatures of 50-degree weather return to Metro Detroit, but so does the rain ... many birds fly south for ...
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