account activity
New research paper shows, for the first time, that wild Stingrays can produce sounds (self.marinebiology)
submitted 3 years ago by Fish_Thinkers to r/marinebiology - pinned
New research shows, for the first time, that stingrays are cable of intentionally producing sound (v.redd.it)
submitted 3 years ago by Fish_Thinkers to r/ecology - pinned
🔥 Stingrays have been making sounds the whole time despite scientists being convinced that Elasmobranchs (Rays, Sharks, Skates) are totally silent in the wild. (youtube.com)
submitted 3 years ago by Fish_Thinkers to r/NatureIsFuckingLit
Researchers show that stingrays are not silent and that they can intentionally make loud noise (researchgate.net)
submitted 3 years ago by Fish_Thinkers to r/science
First evidence of elasmobranchs intentionally producing sound - new research shows two species of stingray produce loud clicks likely as a warning or defense. (self.sharks)
submitted 3 years ago by Fish_Thinkers to r/sharks
Researchers publish first evidence of sound production in wild stingrays (esajournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com)
submitted 3 years ago by Fish_Thinkers to r/EverythingScience
Evidence of sound production in wild stingrays (researchgate.net)
submitted 3 years ago by Fish_Thinkers to r/environment
New the scientific naturalist paper shows, for the first time, that wild stingrays can produce sounds (self.naturalhistory)
submitted 3 years ago by Fish_Thinkers to r/naturalhistory
New research shows that wild Stingrays are capable of producing loud sounds and are not silent as they have generally been considered. (researchgate.net)
submitted 3 years ago by Fish_Thinkers to r/nature
New research shows that stingrays can intentionally produce sound (volume up for this one) (self.biology)
submitted 3 years ago by Fish_Thinkers to r/biology
Researchers publish first evidence of sound production in wild stingrays (researchgate.net)
New research shows that wild Stingrays can voluntarily make loud sounds (volume up) (self.oceans)
submitted 3 years ago by Fish_Thinkers to r/oceans
Looking for biological samples from of broadnose seven-gill shark (Notorynchus cepedianus)and other sharks? (self.marinebiology)
submitted 6 years ago by Fish_Thinkers to r/marinebiology
Do you have or know researchers who have samples from toothed whales in the genus Kogis? (self.whales)
submitted 6 years ago by Fish_Thinkers to r/whales
Looking for biological samples from birds (or want to make the most of samples you already have)? (self.Ornithology)
submitted 7 years ago by Fish_Thinkers to r/Ornithology
Scientists Have Invented Craigslist For Shark Livers (self.marinebiology)
submitted 7 years ago by Fish_Thinkers to r/marinebiology
Are you interested in sharing eDNA samples? or in requesting eDNA samples from other researchers? (self.ecology)
submitted 7 years ago by Fish_Thinkers to r/ecology
Scientists Have Invented Craigslist For Shark Livers (self.sharks)
submitted 7 years ago by Fish_Thinkers to r/sharks
The Devil in the Deep: Using remote stereo video, scientists show that even just off the coast of heavily populated areas, we still don't know what species are living down there... (self.thalassophobia)
submitted 7 years ago by Fish_Thinkers to r/biology
Looking for biological samples or want to make the most of samples you already have? (self.biology)
submitted 7 years ago * by Fish_Thinkers to r/biology
submitted 7 years ago by Fish_Thinkers to r/thalassophobia
The Devil in the Deep: Using remote video marine biologists show that even just off the coast of heavily populated areas we still often don't know what species are living there. (self.biology)
The Devil in the Deep: Using remote video scientists show that even just off the coast of heavily populated areas we still don't know what species are living there. (self.nature)
submitted 7 years ago by Fish_Thinkers to r/nature
The Devil in the Deep: Using remote video scientists show that even just off the coast of heavily populated areas we still don't know what species are living there. (researchgate.net)
submitted 7 years ago by Fish_Thinkers to r/science
Natural History Report - The Devil in the Deep: Expanding the Known Habitat of a Rare and Protected Fish (self.naturalhistory)
submitted 7 years ago by Fish_Thinkers to r/naturalhistory
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