Japanese eels can escape predators’ stomach through their gills, finds study
by Nicola Davis Science correspondent from Science | The Guardian on (#6QK8W)
Eels use tail-first technique to back up digestive tract of fish towards oesophagus before coming out of gills
It sounds like the plot of a horror movie - a predator swallows its prey only for the creature to burst out of its captor's body. But it seems Japanese eels do just that.
Scientists in Japan have discovered that when swallowed by a dark sleeper fish, the eels can escape.
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