Dart Poison | AMNH https://www.amnh.org/exhibitions/frogs-a-chorus-of-colors/poison-dart-frog-vivarium/dart-poison
and highly toxic frog species to poison their blow darts
and highly toxic frog species to poison their blow darts
and highly toxic frog species to poison their blow darts
and highly toxic frog species to poison their blow darts
As a conservation geneticist, Yael tries to help endangered species by studying their DNA.
collect samples of DNA, Yael shot some lemurs with tiny darts
The oceans are filled with creatures that use poison to survive. Some use chemical defenses to deter predators. Others, like cone snails, use poison to capture prey.
Fact Cone snails carry tiny hollow „darts“ in one
As a conservation geneticist, Yael tries to help endangered species by studying their DNA.
collect samples of DNA, Yael shot some lemurs with tiny darts
Bright, tiny, and toxic, Central and South American dart-poison
toxic skin secretions to add lethal tips to blowgun darts
Over 80 kinds of poison frogs live in the tropical forests of Central and South America.
learn to hunt by shooting frogs they tip their darts
Newly minted Ph.D. John Denton is an ichthyologist who studied the evolution of lanternfishes for his dissertation.
light, perhaps to distract predators as the fish darts
Live animals on display in The Power of Poison elucidate the diversity and ubiquity of poisons in nature.
the Emberá hunters in the Chocó use blowguns and darts
Any drop of untreated water, from a lake, a river or the ocean, is a world in miniature.
It paralyzes its victim with poison darts called trichocysts
Go deep into the microscopic world inside a drop of pond water.
[A small organism darts among the strands of spirogyra